Mission for Peace: Point 4 in Iran


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Table of contents :
01. Point 4
02. country agreement in iran
03. jackasses
04. the cabinet committee digs in
05. clicks turn back
06. 35,000 reds fly to iran
07. the thirtieth of tir
08. six farsa to shalamzar
09. yankee go home
10. the fight for life
11. Pure water to drink
12. opening the windows of heaven
13. a project, full cycle
14. from peasants to freeholders
15. sands run low
16. doors to progress
17. twenty-eight of mordad
18. rebuilding iran
19. khiaban asle chahar
20. co-operation with other missions
21. a country director goes home
22. index
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731349

338.955 W241m

sj

illiam E. Warne >untry Director/Iran,

1952-1955

Point 4 in Iran

The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Indianapolis/New York

Inc.

Copyright © 1956 by The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc. Printed in the United States of America

First Edition Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 56:11322

NvA 731349 FUHRMAN FUND

\"W\

Author’s Note

has been written to illuminate a recent phase of history and to report to the people of the United States on the stewardship of a public charge. The enterprise described was the work of many men and women, American and Iranian alike. The people who appear are some who contributed to or influ¬ enced the work, but they do not make up a roster. Other inci¬ dents in our experience, projects in our general task could have been chosen with equal or perhaps more telling effect, and if they had been chosen other participants, with equal right to notice, would have been introduced. This account is told as I saw and remember it. It is all true, within whatever limits are imposed by my abilities as a reporter. The direct quotations are all presented as though English alone were the language used, but this was not the case. In many in¬ stances the communication was through my interpreters, Messrs. Ardeshir Zahedi, Reza Ansari and Mohamoud Moghadam. Some of the public figures, such as Dr. Mossadegh, General Zahedi and Minister Djaffari, who figure here, used no English, and most of the countrymen knew only Farsee or another local tongue. I never learned the language of Iran but became familiar with words, expressions and phrases only. The labor of setting this down on paper was done while I was a Philips Visitor at Haverford College in Pennsylvania during my home leave between assignments abroad. Without the un¬ usual generosity of the donor of the fund and the invitation ex¬ tended to me by President Gilbert F. White of the College it would not have been possible for me to perform the task. I acknowledge as well my debt of gratitude to the staff of the United States Operation Mission to Iran who when I left Iran This account

5

6

Mission for Peace

bound and presented to me the reports and public papers. These have been used constantly as reference material. Without this kindness of the staff, which made quick and refreshing reviews possible, the writing could not have been completed in the time available. I am indebted to Mrs. Anne Ross for encouragement and suggestions and to Mrs. Dorothy G. Brownback and Miss Elsie A. Hartman for hours and hours of work on the transcrip¬ tions. Spelling in English of Iranian places and proper names—and most other words—is a freehand matter. Iran would have been an ideal place for me as a schoolboy, for spelling then was the bane of my existence. It does not matter there whether an

“a”

or an e or an o or an “i” or “u” is used. In items in our official reports from Tehran, I find on review, a village that was wrecked by an earthquake was variously called “Tarud,” “Toroud,” “Torood, and Taroud, among other spellings. It was always the same place, and no one on the staff was confused by such a variety of usages. This is exactly what I, as a boy, ineffectively tried to point out to my spelling teacher. So long as the reader can guess what is meant, what’s the difference? There is no authoritative guide for the transliteration of Iranian words to English. At least four Farsee consonants have no equivalent English sound, and the Farsee writing omits the vowels, or mostly so. The purpose of this little disquisition is to warn readers that place names, sur¬ names and other reference words may not appear in this book as they have elsewhere. The writer must, for instance, choose among Karadj, Keraj, Kerej, Keradj; Radji, Rajy, Ragi; Tadjwell, variations are almost infinite in almost any place name. Nevertheless I ve tried to pick the spelling most likely to be familiar and—whatever my boyhood difficulty—to be con¬ sistent. The opinions expressed are, of course, my own unless other¬ wise credited. They represent my point of view. Since I was a participant, these opinions may not have been arrived at in a

7

Author's Note

wholly objective way. They are, at least, the result of observa¬ tion and earnest thought. A reader will not need, however, to be a detective to ferret out the fact that I am, and was from the start of this adventure, a strong believer in the program and was and am friendly toward Iran. I hope that I may have earned as well, as an employe of my government, the right to say that I have put service to the United States above other considerations here. My account may well reflect that value; I do not think it is dis¬ torted by it. William

E. Warne

CONTENTS 1/Point 4

13

2/Country Agreement in Iran

30

3/Jackasses

48

4/The Cabinet Committee Digs In

55

5/Clocks Turn Back

65

6/"35,000 Reds Fly to Iran”

75

7/The Thirtieth of Tir

87

8/Six Farsa to Shalamzar

100

9/Yankee Go Home

116

10/The Fight for Life

136

11/Pure Water to Drink

151

12/Opening the Windows of Heaven

170

13/A Project, Full Cycle

183

14/From Peasants to Freeholders

190

15/Sands Run Low

205

16/Doors to Progress

223

17/Twenty-eighth of Mordad

241

18/Rebuilding Iran

256

19/Khiaban Asle Chahar

277

20/Co-operation with Other Missions

293

21/A Country Director Goes Home

305

Index

315

The reader is asked to keep in mind that Point 4 is the term applied to the continuing technical co-operation program of the United States. This program is the central theme of this book. The term was never officially applied to the work. But it is under¬ stood everywhere. Even Americans fail to recognize the various formal designations. Point 4 is understood around the world. In the most remote places the words become a passport, a warranty of friendship, a whole language when no other words would have meaning. Officially the agency that has administered the Point 4 pro¬ gram first was known as the Technical Cooperation Administra¬ tion, and it was a bureau in the Department of State. In the sum¬ mer of 1953 the Foreign Operations Administration was set up independently of the State Department and the Point 4 program was transferred to it. On June 30, 1955, the FOA died and on July 1 the Point 4 program was back in the State Department, this time in a new, semi-autonomous agency known as the Inter¬ national Cooperation Administration. The important thing is that the Point 4 program has been continuous despite these reor¬ ganizations. They affected the people and programs in the field less than might have been expected. As the Iranians would say, “It is the same donkey, but the saddle has been changed.”

Mission/1

Point 4

T

he road

through Khonsar climbs a narrow valley in the

Bakhtiari Mountains among irrigated fields strung like

emeralds on the thread of the river. Sometimes the fields are bunched in a little flat; sometimes, where ditches have been led off the plunging stream, they climb up the steep sides of the valley trench. Wherever the valley is broad enough the people have built mud villages. Khonsar is the largest of these. Engineer Khalil Taleghani, Dr. Mahmoud Moghadam and I were bouncing over the rutted gravel road in my car, leading a procession into the valley. We were bound for the Khurang Tunnel then under construction far beyond Khonsar, up near Yellow Mountain at the crest of the Zagros range. It was my first trip into this beautiful, remote west-central part of Iran. Along the way we passed mud pigeon cotes as big as barns. These were designed to collect droppings to manure the fields. Tobacco leaves were spread on the clover fields to dry. Engineer Tale¬ ghani, who was then minister of agriculture, was telling me about the Golpayagan cattle, some of which we had just seen grazing at the roadside, small-boned, trim and colored like Jerseys. “This cow,” Khalil said, “is very efficient. The Golpayagan is a separate breed.” We entered a leafy tunnel. The mud walls of Khonsar pinched in against the track. Trees growing along the jubes (ditches) on either side arched across the road. So suddenly that there was no chance to avoid it, we ran into a massive road block of hundreds of men and boys. In a flash we were completely surrounded.

13

14

Mission for Peace

In the time it took Hossein, my driver, to stop the car, with the dust still billowing around us, Khalil turned to me and said, “They are friendly, I think. We had best get out of the car fast;’ Until then it had not occurred to me that we could be am¬ bushed, but 1952 was a year of great tribulation in Persia and violence was a tradition among the half-wild people living in pastoral isolation in these valleys. I flung the door open and we piled out into the mud of the ditch. A great cry arose. “Yea, yea, yea! Asle Chahar!” It was repeated. “Yea, yea, yea! Asle Chahar!” I knew enough Farsee to understand that cheer. “Hurray, hurray, hurray for Point 4!” Again, “Hurray, hurray, hurray for Point 4!” The crowd pressed in on us, but the faces were smiling our welcome. “I am Abolghassam Samii,” one man, dressed as the rest in a western-type suit and a shirt without a tie, said as he stepped forward. “You are Mr. Warne, I believe, and this is Engineer Taleghani?” I could only nod in speechless surprise. “You are welcome to Khonsar. Will you follow me?” The crowd divided to make a lane for us. “How did they know we were coming?” I asked Khalil and Dr. Moghadam. “We didn't plan to stop here.” They both shrugged. "It is the giveh telegraph,” Dr. Moghadam said. The giveh is a moccasinlike shoe woven of string, worn by all Iranian country people. The “giveh telegraph” is the Iranian version of the American Indian “moccasin telegraph.” We'd say “grapevine.” Now an old ewe was sacrificed ceremoniously in our path and, to expiate the evil eye, the blood from the dripping head was

Point 4

15

spread before us in a pattern of red splashes in the dust. We were ushered to a long table set under a tree in the yard of a halffinished building. As others of our party arrived they too were captured and brought to the festive board. While tea was being served in little glasses set in silver holders, Mr. Samii told us the story of the building. It was planned as a health clinic but for two years had been incomplete. There was no money to finish it. “Will you tell the minister of health that we have no clinic, no hospital, no doctor for 100,000 people in this valley?” he asked. After tea we were led, with a great comet’s tail of men and boys following, through the winding kuchehs (paths or alleys) of Khonsar, while Mr. Samii explained the problems of the village. Now and then he saw a woman wrapped in her chadora going about some humble task, melting through a door in a mud wall on seeing us or, if there was no gate, turning and facing some niche until we had gone by. A few more watched us over the edges of the flat roofs. Mr. Samii said that there was typhoid fever and that there had been some malaria. Many babies died of bowel sickness. The one school had no windows. It could care for only a few of the boys. Flies were a great nuisance. At last we realized we were being led to the abattoir. Situated on the high side of the village, near the road, it was simply a grove of trees with hooks tied to the lower limbs. Here the slaughtering was done and the meat was cut up. The floor of packed earth drained directly into a flowing ditch which carried the water supply of Khonsar. “Isn’t it possible,” Mr. Samii asked, “that this open-air slaugh¬ terhouse here on the ditch bank makes people sick in our village and causes the pestilence of flies?” “Why, yes,” I said. “The offal should be kept out of the water supply. The slaughterhouse should be moved to the low side of town.”

16

Mission for Peace

Mr. Samii knew, as did some other \ad\hodas (leaders) of the village, what should be done about this problem, but there was no institution through which to focus the energies of the people on a solution. He and the others were going to use my confirma¬ tion for its effect on public opinion. The slaughterhouse, I later learned, was moved the next day. Then we were back on the road, climbing into the waiting cars. We said our good-bys, and I waved out of the window as we pulled away. “Yea, yea, yea! Asle Chahar!” I heard them shout once more behind us. “Do you think,” I asked Khalil and Dr. Moghadam, “that these country people know what Point 4 means ?” “They know Point 4,” Khalil Taleghani said, “as you have just seen.” “I am not quite certain that I know what ‘Point 4 means,” Dr. Moghadam, my interpreter, assistant and friend, added dryly. As we rode along I tried to explain about the name. President Truman s inaugural address of January 20, 1949, described American foreign policy in the terms of four major courses of action. In making the fourth point he said: We must embark on a bold, new program for making the benefits of our scientific advancements and industrial progress available for improvement and growth to underdeveloped areas-I believe that we should make available to peace-loving peoples the benefits of our store of technical knowledge in order to help them realize their aspirations for a better life. Its position in the listing of the President’s proposals, I ex¬ plained to Dr. Moghadam, gave the Technical Cooperation Pro¬ gram the popular name “Point 4,” since it was the fourth point that Mr. Truman made. For some reason the cryptic term “Point 4” has better conveyed the idea of American technical co-opera¬ tion to the popular mind the world over than all efforts at more

Point 4

17

formal definition and nomenclature. But a definition of the term will be found in the words the President used, “a bold, new program” of the United States to share technical knowledge in order to help peace-loving peoples of underdeveloped countries to “realize their aspirations for a better life.” As we jounced along the bumpy road, the dust behind us en¬ gulfing the plodding donkeys and their drivers in refuge at the side of the track, my mind went back to the beginning of this business that had sent me and hundreds more to strange places around the world. I remember thinking, as I waited on one of the huge fan of folding chairs arrayed before the Capitol in Washington on Janu¬ ary 20,1949, that most observers at such historic occasions as the inauguration of a President may remember little more than an uncomfortable chair too long sat on and the noise of a mechan¬ ical speaker too loud in the ear. Standing up while the band played “Hail to the Chief” helped somewhat. It restored circu¬ lation in my feet. It was so cold that one of the senators who had come out to the balustrade just before Mr. Truman appeared had drawn a blanket about his shoulders. The ceremony got under way at high noon. As the inaugural address proceeded, many in the audience began to feel the lift of an important hour. For them as for me, it came with Mr. Tru¬ man’s proposal of “a bold, new program” as the fourth point of his foreign policy. During the days that followed, news of Point 4 and comment about it raced around the world. America would share the technical advances that had made her great. America would help the peoples of underdeveloped areas to help them¬ selves toward a better life. Soon this generous plan, like renewed hope, fired the hearts and minds of men almost everywhere. In the sixth-floor corridors of the Interior Building, where I had my office, conferences were now being held. Our work in Interior had previously been as distinct as the name implies from that done by the State Department abroad. But now Interior was

18

Mission for Peaces

preparing to send some of its technicians to foreign fields to do' the work they did expertly at home—planning irrigation proj¬ ects, designing dams, directing geological surveys and teaching range management. These men were to apply techniques proved valuable in the Indian Service to encourage isolated peoples to adopt modern methods in their work, to devise ways to use native ores, to develop fisheries—in general, to utilize their resources to their own best possible advantage. Elsewhere in Washington other agencies were making similar preparations. Colleges and universities all across the United States were launching training for the same kinds of programs. It takes time to start any vast undertaking. Congress ground away on the legislation. On June 5, 1950, the Act for In¬ ternational Development was passed. Then money had to be appropriated. Now an organization known as the Technical Cooperation Administration was set up in the State Departments For the first few weeks Capus Waynick, ambassador to Nicara¬ gua, was detailed acting administrator. On December 1, 1950,, Dr. Henry Garland Bennett, president of Oklahoma A & M, took office as administrator. In Interior we had our private jokes over the new work. Should, for instance, the office created to handle our participation be called “The Office of the Exterior?” Now heavy official machinery necessarily moves slowlyTherefore I was surprised when one October morning the Wash¬ ington Post told me that the first Point 4 agreement had been signed on October 19, 1950, at Abayaz Palace in Tehran by Am¬ bassador Henry F. Grady and General Ali Razmara, prime min¬ ister of Iran. This agreement, creating an Iranian-United States Joint Commission for Rural Improvement, called for co-opera¬ tion in a program under which American experts in agriculture, health and education would work with Persians to train the peas¬ ants and villagers of Iran. The plan was, most newspapers agreed, in the best American tradition of neighborliness. The choice of ancient Persia, many commented, was fitting. Through

Point 4

19

the strategic Persian deserts had been erected the “bridge of vic¬ tory,” over which American, British and Russian armies had sent material and guns to help turn back the Nazis before Stalingrad and drive them to final defeat. Some reporters recalled the prom¬ ise made at the close of the Tehran conference of the Big Three in 1943 to help Iran once the war was over. When E. Reeseman (Si) Fryer transferred from Interior to direct the work of TCA in the Near East and Africa region, I began to lose the detachment of a merely interested spectator. Si Fryer had been my friend and associate for a long time. He came to me with a problem. “As you know, most of these areas are arid,” he said. “Their physical problems will be much like the ones Interior wrestles with in our West. Their human problems, many of them, will be like those facing the Indian Service and the Office of Islands and Territories. In fact, TCA is already borrowing ideas from your Puerto Rico, Alaska and Indian operations. How about letting us have some experienced people, too ?” “Well now, Si,” I bridled like any bureaucrat, “we have our own programs, you know.” “But we need help,” he argued, “and, Bill Warne, you know that Interior can spare a few men.” “What have you got in mind?” I asked tentatively, not yield¬ ing. “TCA will set up an office in each host country. We’ll need a country director for each,” he explained. “There will be special divisions in most country missions for engineering, agriculture and so forth. We need good men to head these divisions.” “What, specifically, would you like to have me do?” I asked, still sparring. “Call a meeting of the bureau and office heads and let Dr. Ben¬ nett tell them what we plan to do and what we need.” Fair enough, I thought. I said, “I’ll do it next week.” Fryer was particularly anxious at the moment to find men to

20

Mission for Peace

head programs in India, in Iran and in Egypt. We mentioned several common acquaintances in Interior as possible candidates. One whose name was discussed at that time, Clifford Willson, now has a long and successful record as country director in India. Dr. Bennett preached the evangel of Point 4. He saw it as a worldwide extension service, a transmission belt to carry the re¬ sults of research to farms, homes and factories, where technical knowledge could be put to use in practical ways. It was the landgrant-college idea grown up to world proportions. Tough and blase as were the Interior men I invited, Dr. Ben¬ nett’s talk warmed them. I know I felt again at our luncheon the thrill that came with hearing the original Point 4 proposal. It was time, I felt, that the United States as a nation went ear¬ nestly to work to maintain peace. During those months another series of events almost halfway around the world crowded into the headlines. The prime min¬ ister of Iran was assassinated—the same General Razmara who had signed the historic first Point 4 agreement. A new leader was pressing forward under a banner of fanatic nationalism. His platform was to force the British out of the area in which they had oil concessions in southern Iran and to “nationalize,” or ex¬ propriate, the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company’s Abadan refinery, the largest in the world. A bit of the personality of Dr. Moham¬ med Mossadegh began to creep into the newspaper columns. When the British oilfield workers left Persia and the Abadan refinery was finally closed, the American public became faintly aware of the new problems. Newspaper reports reminded them that Iran contained the largest proved petroleum reserves in the world. Shutting off the spigot at the head of the Persian Gulf put new pressure on oil-producing areas all over. War in Korea had begun a month ago. Adjustments were both essential and difficult. This was an emergency. Headline writers now struggling with the name “Mossadegh”

Point 4

21

began familiarly to use “Mossy” or “Old Mossy .” The new prime minister spent most of his time in bed, and he wept and even fainted as he emotionally stated his case in public meetings. He stubbornly called the AIOC the “ex-oil company.” His picture was on the cover of Time, and after his trip to the United States he became Time’s Man of the Year 1951, who “oiled the wheels of chaos.” Perhaps in the Interior Department we were more than usually aware of the potential importance of Iranian oil in a war situation. One of our agencies was the emergency petroleum ad¬ ministration. So when Si Fryer came to see me again in October

,1 was acutely conscious of Iran.

1951

I was preparing to make a

flying trip to Billings, Montana, to attend the fifth anniversary meeting of the Missouri Basin Field Committee, which I had sponsored. I was packing my brief case when Si entered. He got to the point at once. “Bill, we still have no one for country director in Iran.” “Why, Si,” I said, “John Evans left Interior to go out there last month.” “Yes, John’s there, but he didn’t go to head the mission. He’s helping to plan the program’s expansion. It will be increased twenty times this year.” “And how about your man from Utah?” I asked. “Isn’t his name Harris ? I think you told me he was in Iran.” “Yes,” answered Si, “he went over in the spring of 1950, just after he retired as president of Utah State Agricultural College. He set up the first project—Rural Improvement—and is tech¬ nical director of the project now. But his two-year tour is almost over. Besides, we’ve got to expand Iran’s program a great deal. The situation there is critical. You know something about our problems, so you know this is going to be our toughest job.” Catching me off guard he added quickly, “Why don’t you go?” I laughed and fled to the airport.

22

Mission for Peace

It was late October, and snow was flying over much of the Mis¬ souri Basin. We were snowed in when we made a trip to inspect a fish hatchery which was a part of the Missouri Basin develop¬ ment program. I had time to think about Si’s question. I had been in Washington eighteen years—two on the staff of the Associated Press, sixteen with the Department of the Interior, working constantly in the resource development fields. My first position with the Department was in the Bureau of Reclamation. As a Department representative, I had worked on the prepara¬ tion of the reports of the Water Resources Committee of the Na¬ tional Resources Planning Board. I later became involved in directing the Columbia Basin Joint Investigations to plan the Grand Coulee Dam Irrigation Project. I had also helped to estab¬ lish regional planning and development by the Federal agencies and had conducted a program of development in Alaska. But during the past four years, as Assistant Secretary for Wa¬ ter and Power, I had felt at times a need for field experience. I knew, in any event, that one could not make a career of being an assistant secretary in any department of the United States Gov¬ ernment. It is more or less an end-of-the-line job. But I was en¬ grossed at the moment in the immediate problems connected with the great works under way. As we sat before a roaring fire in the guest lodge at the fish hatchery, awaiting the snow plow that would open the road to Billings, I ran over in my mind a dozen times what Si Fryer had said—no director yet for the program in Iran. That a strange turn of events in a far-off country had presented us with an emer¬ gency emphasized to me that all the world is related. By a chain of cause and effect the needs of one country create problems that become urgent in countries continents and oceans away. In the Interior Department our guiding philosophy had al¬ ways been that each region of the United States should be helped and encouraged to make prudent use of its resources, for this would strengthen all. Now, suddenly, a new concern gripped my mind. Could we

Point 4

23

carry out throughout the world the types of programs on which we had been working in the United States ? How could we help the underprivileged peoples in remote, difficult lands to use their own energies to improve their lives ? How could we lead them through all the various steps to the point where they might un¬ dertake great works for themselves. By helping and encourag¬ ing these people to work out their own problems we could reduce the number of emergencies. The poverty, disease and ignorance that prepared the seedbed for trouble could be overcome as they had so successfully been in the United States. It came to me as a conviction that the Point 4 program could be made to lead directly to these ends. It could give a people inspiration and a start on small tasks which would lead them, in turn, to bigger things. I wanted to be a part of any attempt to make the Point 4 pro¬ gram produce such a design. If hunger and disease were de¬ feated, I felt, mankind should have less occasion for strife and war. Warm and sheltered from the snow, I reflected on the years since the end of the war. Some think of peace as protected by war. Actually war repre¬ sents a defeat in peace. For the first time in the life of our nation, through such programs as Point 4, we were actively waging peace. Some seem to doubt our ability to win a third world war, atomic or otherwise. I, on the other hand, would dread its com¬ ing but not fear its eventual outcome. But if such a war came, it would mean the loss of this peace, won with such difficulty and sacrifice in World War II. But now the United States had de¬ cided to work at the arts of peace—to prepare its defenses and to send out its soldiers in a campaign on fields where peace must be won or lost in the hearts of people. I was ready to enlist! The night we returned to Billings I telephoned my wife. This, in itself, was surprising to Edith, since I seldom called when I was away on short field trips. Then I asked her what she thought of going to Iran. “Would we be back before Christmas?” she asked.

24

Mission for Peace

“I mean how would you like to move to Iran?” “And take the children out of school?” I understood her hesitation. Jane would hate to leave in the middle of her senior year at high school. It would be hard for Robbie, then a freshman, to pull up roots. Second-grader Mar¬ garet was doing well and enjoying school. Would it be fair to ask her to adjust to a situation so radically different from the one she was used to ? “Well?” I asked. “Yes, if you want to,” Edith said, “but where is it?” I asked the operator to get me Mr. Fryer in Washington. “Bill!” Si almost shouted as soon as the connection was made. “When can you start for Iran?” “I guess that’s what I called to tell you. I’ll go to Iran if we can get the necessary clearances from Oscar Chapman and the President.” The next morning I called Secretary Chapman at Interior. He talked to the President that day, and by the time I returned to Washington everything was settled but the formalities. Things moved very swiftly indeed, though, as the hundreds who have followed know, there were countless official forms, fingerprints, health examinations and inoculations. All sorts of arrangements had to be completed. We decided that my family would wait until summer and follow me after school closed, but I had to go at once. My resignation from Interior became effective on No¬ vember 7,1951, and I was sworn in the next morning in the office of Under Secretary James A. Webb of the State Department as Country Director of Technical Cooperation for Iran. Late in 1951, while I was struggling to settle my own affairs. Dr. Mossadegh arrived in the United States hoping to obtain help for his country. Iran was going broke. The oil had stopped flowing. She had no way to market it. The American public, by this time inured to visits of kings, prime ministers and presidents, nevertheless took note of Dr.

Point 4

25

Mossadegh’s dramatics. A fainting spell in a crowd of reporters at Idlewild Airport was only the beginning. Inept though it was, people remembered the nickname “Old Mossy.” For reporters it neatly dodged the problem, not yet satisfactorily resolved, of spelling the real name. The final consonant has no English equivalent and might be written “gh” or “q.” It developed that my first duty in my new post was to tell Dr. Mossadegh how much money was allocated for the Technical Cooperation program in Iran. The Congress acted very late in 1951 on the appropriations for foreign aid. Because of Dr. Mossa¬ degh’s presence, however, it was quickly decided after the bill was passed to make available to Iran a total of $23,450,000. This amount would serve Point 4 for the 1952 fiscal year, which would end June 30. I was at this time introduced to a young American Army ma¬ jor who was to interpret for me when I called on Mossadegh. He was one of the retinue assigned to assist the Mossadegh party while it was in the United States. En route from the office to the Shoreham Hotel in a State De¬ partment car, the major and I talked about the size of the allot¬ ment. Dr. Mossadegh had asked for much more. “Don’t be thrown by his first reactions,” the major said. “The whole party has become greatly discouraged and he is apt to be glad to get something, almost anything, so he can go home.” An Iranian who was introduced to me in the lobby quickly ushered us into an elevator. A few moments later he, in turn, in¬ troduced me to half a dozen more Iranians who were standing around in Dr. Mossadegh’s suite. Many times later Iranian friends in Tehran reminded me that we had first met at the Shoreham Hotel, but they couldn’t prove it by me, for I was directed immediately into a bedroom to meet the prime min¬ ister. I had hardly the opportunity to nod to them, much less catch the strange names. As I entered the bedroom I found Dr. Mossadegh lying against

26

Mission for Peace

a pillow. Drawn about him he wore a dun-colored camel’s hair bathrobe, and he had pulled the coverlet well up toward his chin. He sat up spryly as my interpreter found a seat on the side of the second of the twin beds. I was given the position of honor on a very straight-backed hotel bedroom chair. Iranians are apt to be formal and to exchange many pleas¬ antries before getting down to business. During a great deal of the early part of the conference we discussed Dr. Mossadegh’s health. When I said that I hoped he was feeling better he assured me that nothing really serious was wrong—he simply was very tired. Next the major and Dr. Mossadegh exchanged comments regarding previous meetings. I was fascinated by the prime min¬ ister’s expressive hands, his gentle voice and his sensitive face. He was an old man but in no way feeble. I had been told that he had a keen sense of humor and liked a quiet joke. Finally I said that I presumed he knew that I had been chosen to go to his capital as director of the Point 4 mission. I had come to tell him that the United States was prepared to undertake what seemed to me to be a fairly sizable program in the immediate future. At that point I had intended to try a little joke. I didn’t get the chance. “That will be fine, Mr. Warne,” Dr. Mossadegh said quickly. “How much?” Though I did not need the reminder, I unfolded from my pocket a paper with a figure written on it. “$23,450,000.” There followed a rapid-fire conversation in Farsee between the prime minister and the major. After a while the major said, “Dr. Mossadegh is seriously dis¬ appointed.” He didn’t try to fill in all the blank spaces for me. “Dr. Mossa¬ degh believes that $23,450,000 for technical co-operation isn’t enough. He’s of the opinion that there must be other means of aiding him, and he’d like to know whether you mean that this is the total amount of United States aid Iran will receive this year.”

Point 4

27

I replied that, according to my information, this was the amount to be extended to Iran in the 1952 fiscal year, which would end next June 30, seven months hence. Compared with sums for other countries in the region, it was a very large amount indeed. The major relayed what I’d said to Dr. Mossadegh. We talked for some minutes longer about the level of aid. Our discussion related to Dr. Mossadegh’s belief that the sum was inadequate, but I am not sure that he was genuinely disappointed. After a while he dropped back against the pillow—a unique conference mannerism which I came to know meant that Dr. Mossadegh was ready to change the subject—and we began to discuss seri¬ ously how the money might be used. He would sit up again if he became interested in the new subject. I stressed to him that the Point 4 program should be a co¬ operative effort. I would work with whomever he appointed to represent his country. I emphasized that Point 4’s aim was to develop projects that would help the people of Iran to better their own ways of living—rural sanitation, health measures, improve¬ ment of rural schools, better farming methods and some demon¬ strations in basic industries. There would be more projects, all with the single purpose of training the people to help them¬ selves. Dr. Mossadegh seemed to me to be genuinely interested in the welfare of his people. Although he would rather see some big, spectacular project, like a dam, undertaken to provide the immediate action which Iran craved, he could see the point of the technical assistance approach. He was sitting up again. “Oh, but, Mr. Warne,” Dr. Mossadegh said near the end of this first meeting, “you must control every penny of this money. None of it must be let out of your hands.” I was surprised. Others had intimated to me that Dr. Mossa¬ degh would try to gain control of the funds, despite his reputa¬ tion, which I never had cause to question, for personal honesty. This was a completely different approach from what I had been led to expect. I again explained that it would be our purpose to

28

Mission for Peace

work co-operatively with his people. We did not want to start American programs in Iran, but to assist Iran in the development of her own projects. I told him I thought the money ought to be spent according to a joint plan which should be agreed upon by me and the people representing his government. “Oh, but, Mr. Warne,” Dr. Mossadegh said again, “you must not let the crooks get this money.” I said that I should have to work with whomever he desig¬ nated and stressed again that no program or project undertaken would be considered worthy of the name Point 4 if it were Amer¬ ican and not Iranian. Iran would have to request any project and Iranians would have to participate actively in it. All the work would be carried on in co-operation with Iranians, with and through Iranian agencies and experts. Dr. Mossadegh was nodding his head as the major translated this. I wanted to drive home the point at this moment, so as soon as the major stopped I went on with my explanation. I under¬ lined the fact that unless the work was done by Iranians it could not be useful in training people and demonstrating techniques. Work done by others could not later be duplicated by Iran. “I shall choose my people carefully,” Dr. Mossadegh said. “We must not let the crooks get this money. But then I know them, every one.” We agreed that as soon as we were both in Iran a joint group would set up complete plans. A country agreement, as we al¬ ready were calling the basic document of understanding under¬ lying the Point 4 programs, was required by our law. “I hope,” Dr. Mossadegh said, “that the terms will not be too arduous.” “They will not be very demanding,” I said. “Iran will have to agree to use our help and to help finance joint projects so far as she can. That’s about all.” “The people of Iran are very sensitive right now,” Dr. Mossa¬ degh continued, making a very expressive gesture with his hands

Point 4

29

and long fingers. With this one motion he seemed to include in the conversation the reaction against the British oil concession and all of his country’s newly felt nationalism. “I hope the lan¬ guage of the agreement will give no affront.” “I promise you,” I said, anticipating little trouble, “that I will make every effort to make the agreement satisfactory to you be¬ fore it is formally presented.” The major and I were ready to leave. When we rose, Dr. Mossadegh cheerily waved a farewell. “When you bring me that paper,” he called, “I will sign it.”

Mission/2

Country Agreement in Iran

T

he next time I saw Dr. Mossadegh I was in Tehran. I ar¬

rived at Mehrabad Airport at 8:oo p.m. on November 28,

1951, and was met by a welcoming group of Americans and Iranians. In the crowd I saw one familiar face grinning at me. Si Fryer had rushed on ahead. “Why are you late?” Si yelled from behind the fence as offi¬ cials were checking my passport. “Engine conked out at Damascus and we spent last night in Syria. Just got out ahead of a revolution there today.” My trip from Washington to Iran had been made on a tight nine-day schedule. I had stopped in New York to visit the United Nations Technical Assistance group, in Paris to confer with the UNESCO Technical Assistance directors, in Geneva to meet with officials of the International Labor Organization and the World Health Organization and in Rome to confer with Food and Agricultural Organization officials. All of these agencies also had programs in Iran. We made two attempts to reach Tehran on November 27, but the plane finally had to turn back to Damascus, where mechanics frantically repaired an engine. Several weeks elapsed before I fully appreciated what had been going on in Tehran while I was en route. It had not oc¬ curred to me that at Mehrabad there was no way to keep tab on approaching planes.

I finally learned through comments

dropped here and there in casual conversation that a reception

30

Country Agreement in Iran

31

had been arranged on the twenty-seventh at 9:30

a.m.,

the time

my plane was scheduled to arrive. No plane, no Warne, no ex¬ planation. The committee had returned at 5:00

p.m.,

thinking

that the plane would arrive then. It didn’t. The group returned to the airport at 9 30 the morning of the twenty-eighth. Still no plane. Most of the committee didn’t believe a report that the plane would arrive at 8:00

p.m.

It was then and is today most

unusual for an international carrier to schedule its arrival in Tehran after dark, since there are no night landing aids at the airport. But rising tension forced us to leave Damascus when we did, regardless of when we would reach Tehran. The faithful were present, however, for the fourth time, and they did wel¬ come me. With my head buzzing from long hours of flying and with the dreary customs line still before me, I am afraid I did not fully appreciate their courtesy. “I am leaving at six o’clock in the morning,” Si said as we started to drive the ten miles to the Darband Hotel. “But,” I protested, “it gives us no time to talk!” “I had hoped at least to have with you the day that your plane used up in Damascus. Dr. Bennett wants me to join him in Rome for a few days before I return to Washington. He’s going to continue his trip through the Middle East and Asia. He’ll be here in three weeks and hopes the country agreement can be signed while he’s here. Perhaps I can come back with him.” Si and John Evans were in my room until the eleven o’clock curfew maintained under martial law drove John home. Si and I talked on. Gradually the whole picture emerged. About forty \J technicians had been assembled, mostly in agriculture and mostly from Utah. A plan had been laid out to decentralize operations by establishing a regional office in each of the ten ma¬ jor provincial capitals, Tehran, Tabriz, Resht, Babolsar, Meshed, Kermanshah, Isfahan, Shiraz, Ahwaz and Kerman. This plan would pull the Iranian Government programs, now hopelessly centralized, out into the field. The Rural Improvement Program

32

Mission for Peace

would remain our mainspring, since nearly eighty-five of every hundred Iranians lived in villages. Some new programs were needed nevertheless—in industrial development, especially with regard to processing farm products, in agrarian reform and in public administration. “By the way, Bill,” Si said, “Dr. Mossadegh won’t recognize the Razmara agreement. He won’t renounce it, either. Some new shape will have to be given to the program, but that won’t be hard because of the expansion.” “You’re talking Greek to me,” I complained. “I haven’t got this straightened out yet.” “The agreement Ambassador Grady signed with General Raz¬ mara in October 1950,” Si explained, “the one setting up the whole Rural Improvement Program, you know. It’s as good as useless now, and until you get the new country agreement there won’t be much foundation for the work here.” “Well, Dr. Mossadegh talked in Washington as though the country agreement wouldn’t be too difficult.” “Perhaps not, but our law requires that the countries receiving aid give certain assurances of collaboration too, in advance of the country agreement. These assurances are causing some bicker¬ ing.” “I’m still not sure I have this clearly in mind,” I said uncer¬ tainly. “Boy, will you have to learn fast!” With that we went to bed. It was scarcely gray dawn when I said good-by to Si Fryer at the airport. “See you in a few days,” I shouted into the cold wind as he started up the ramp. “I’ll try to come back,” he promised. He didn’t return with Dr. Bennett, however, but went on to Washington. John Evans and I rode back to the city in a jeep. I was seeing Tehran for the first time by daylight. The early morning parade of donkeys was on the road near the airport. One train of four camels passed in the distance. Within the city limits the street

Country Agreement in Iran

33

was wide and paved. The buildings were low but, except for their shuttered fronts, did not appear strange to me. We passed the university grounds, surrounded by a high iron fence. “It all looks quite modern,” I observed. “Don’t be fooled,” John cautioned. “Reza Shah imposed this grid of wide streets on the city. Simply razed the old buildings. There are a few of these modern streets north and south and a few east and west. This one is called Shah Reza. But between the broad streets the old \uchehs wind like alleys. And beyond the Bazaar, in the south, the city simply teems with them!” “Somehow I expected Tehran to be more quaint.” “Oh, it has its color, but not along Shah Reza Avenue,” John explained. “Some of the old palaces and houses are grand. And the people in the shops are interesting. They sit and make shoes or fashion trinkets in their laps, and they’re crafty traders. But Tehran is only a few hundred years old. The old city of Rey that stood just there at the foot of that mountain was destroyed by the Mongols. Isfahan or Shiraz or Tabriz are more the quaint and storied cities of Persia. But Tehran is the capital and the principal manufacturing center, and it’s much the biggest.” The early day had grown bright. A great ring of mountains made a partial semicircle around the city. The Elburz were mag¬ nificent, but only on one peak at some distance east could we see any snow. “The big cone out there,” I said, pointing toward that peak. “It must be very high. What’s its name?” “That is Demavand. Isn’t it a beauty? It’s 18,900 feet high.”“Whew!” I whistled. “It beats Rainier or Hood or Shasta. And that great escarpment to the north. What a tremendous wall!” “That high point is Tchotchal—Icepit. It will be covered with snow soon. It still had some on it two months ago when I came.” My hotel, the Darband, stood high against the Elburz escarp- - ' ment at the base of Tchotchal, above Tehran. Each morning I

34

Mission for Peace

rode down the long, straight drive known as Pahlavi Avenue, fascinated by the changing views of the city spread out below. On the morning of December 6,1951, a week and a day after my arrival, as we approached Takte Jamshid Avenue, die first cross street at the city’s edge, I was amazed to see the way blocked by a rushing mob brandishing sticks and chasing another group. Hossein, my driver, in whom I learned to put my faith on such occasions, calmly turned off into an alley. After some turning we re-entered the avenue further down. I looked back, but the mob was gone. Later in the day another group of rioters threatened damage and violence to the United States Informadon Office. Point 4 headquarters were temporarily located in a corner of one room of this building while an old house on Sepah Avenue was being made ready for use as permanent headquarters. Though I knew martial law had been instituted and the cur¬ few imposed after repeated trouble in the streets, I did not yet understand the issues that fomented these riots. Later in the day I saw milling crowds at other places in the city. Everyone not actually engaged in the disturbances went calmly about his busi¬ ness. Even wrhen die shouting was loudest outside the Informa¬ tion Office it was calm inside. The few rocks thrown did not even hit a window. So when I heard next day that several peo¬ ple, including a few students from Tehran University, had been killed, I was deeply shocked at the violence and intensity of the disorder. Nearly twenty years earlier, as a reporter, I had cov¬ ered an affair that had become a riot in a city park in San Diego. Perhaps because I had been afoot and around the edges of it, I remembered that affair as a few minutes of extreme violence. But I had learned when it was all over that there had been only one broken arm among several hundreds of participants to evi¬ dence the event. I began now to reappraise my impressions of the day in Tehran and of die situation into which I had entered. Ambassador Loy W. Henderson, who in September 1951 had

Country Agreement in Iran

35

succeeded Dr. Grady, took me to make my official call, a purely social one, on Prime Minister Mossadegh. As we drove up to the gate of Kakh Avenue a formidable armed guard opened it for us. The ambassador noted that there were more machine guns vis¬ ible than there had been before the riot two days earlier. We soon found ourselves in a small courtyard entirely surrounded by high mud walls, gray under a thinning coat of whitewash. A house occupied one side of the garden. The ambassador explained as we crossed the narrow walk that this was Dr. Mossadegh’s old family residence. The prime minister preferred to use a tiny bedroom on the second floor and never went to his office at all. We entered an unimpressive hallway, neither spacious nor well furnished. Again an armed guard, this time a single soldier holding a bayoneted rifle at present arms, confronted us. One of Dr. Mossadegh’s secretaries came forward. He was a big, heavyset man with an easy smile. We were ushered by gestures (since our guide spoke no English) to the second floor, where we en¬ tered another unimposing hall. Through a door I saw a large sitting room, around which were arranged a number of heavy, old upholstered chairs. At one end stood an iron bed, at this mo¬ ment unoccupied. This was the Cabinet Room, in which Dr. Mossadegh received his ministers. There were almost no formal¬ ities in this hallway-reception room. A few men sat waiting in chairs at one end, and another guard stood- near the head of the stairs. We were joined by Dr. Ali Pasha Saleh, who for thirty years had been an employe of the American embassy. A neigh¬ bor and friend of Dr. Mossadegh, he served as our interpreter. Almost immediately Ambassador Henderson, Dr. Saleh and I were ushered into the bedroom, where the prime minister re¬ ceived us alone. While Dr. Mossadegh and I exchanged pleasantries, remind¬ ing each other of little things that had occurred at our meeting in Washington, a servant fetched tea into the room. Always there would be tea. Soon I was serving it to visitors in my own

36

Mission for Peace

office. The servant laid out tea-things on a low table at the bed¬ side then passed lump sugar and an Iranian candy called ghazd. This sweet, made of a desert plant, has a unique flavor that much intrigued me. I tore a sheet from a tablet on the table and wrapped a square of the ghazd in it. As I placed it in my pocket I explained to Dr. Mossadegh that my eight-year-old daughter, Margaret, would be delighted with this candy when she arrived. Seven months later, on the day Margaret and her mother arrived in Tehran eight boxes of ghazd, one for each year of Margaret’s age, arrived from the prime minister addressed to “Little Miss Margaret Warne.” The ambassador also took me to meet His Majesty Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, Shah-in-Shah of Persia, at his marble palace in Tehran. The palace of yellow-green marble stood in the center of a beautiful formal garden that occupied two city blocks. Its dome was covered with tile in lovely arabesque, the scroll-like pattern that dominates all Persian decoration. It was similar to the domes of the most imposing of the great mosques of Iran. The building itself was square and boxlike, though large. The in¬ terior was pleasant but rather formal, with heavily carved doors and mantels and extraordinarily high ceilings. The graceful staircase was elaborately decorated with painting resembling that used in Persian miniatures. Among the furnishings I found only the lovely carpets altogether arresting. Many were almost paperthin, the pride of the Persian looms for generations back. I had been told that certain formalities were expected at an audience with His Imperial Majesty. In addressing him, for example, I had been cautioned to say “Your Majesty.” But on neither this nor any of the other occasions when I met and talked with him did I find His Imperial Majesty inclined to stand on formal ceremony. The Shah was a grave young man dressed in a dark business suit. Then in his middle thirties, he was fully ten years younger than I. We had tea, seated on opposite sides of a low table.

Country Agreement in Iran

37

There is nothing opulent about the court of Persia today. The time of fabulous splendor is gone with other dynasties and is only now and then glimpsed in a museum or an old palace converted to an office building. The only “other-worldly” touch that I re¬ call connected with entertainment at the court was a delightful hour after a ball at the summer palace in Shimron. The royal couple and most of their guests stayed late, many seated on cush¬ ions and rugs in an aquarium room. Some sang, some played on the quaint old three-cornered guitars of Persia, and one or two were even persuaded to dance. At this a few of the parakeets asleep in the foliage in the solarium window fluttered about in the soft light of the chandeliers, which were shaped like huge clusters of grapes on turning vines of delicate green and ame¬ thyst-colored glass. The Shah, I found on my first call, was completely at home in English. He seemed intelligently interested in the program and hopeful that it would bear fruit in continued good relations be¬ tween our countries and in improved living for the people of Iran. In this first meeting, as at later times, the Shah showed deep compassion for his people. He discussed the need for land re¬ form and for raising the living levels of the peasants. He saw these programs as protections of the western way of life. His Majesty explained a program that he had worked out and recently set in motion through the agency that managed his estates. This agency, Amlock, was distributing the Crown Land villages among the peasants. “The peasants will receive title to their fields,” the Shah said, “and they will pay for their land in twenty-five years at rates about equal to the usual share taken by a landlord.” Ambassador Henderson, who had discussed these plans with the Shah on earlier occasions, explained that the Crown Lands contained nearly 3,000 villages. “The people need a stake in their country,” His Majesty con-

38

Mission for Peace

tinued. “I hope that Point 4 will take an interest in programs like this.” Pleasant as they were, these first meetings in Iran had little influence on the negotiations then in progress to obtain the assur¬ ances required by our law from the host country. We were little nearer, therefore, to signing a country agreement. I was spending many hours with Franklin Harris, technical director of the Rural Improvement Program, John Evans and Robert M. Carr, economic counselor of the embassy. We four were drafting the agreement, reviewing the plan for establishing ten decentralized provincial offices and assigning staff. New per¬ sonnel arrived on almost every plane. Some field work had already begun. The health and agricul¬ ture teams had been growing in number since early summer. Visiting nurses were already working in Shariar. A plan for re¬ habilitating Isfahanek, a run-down village near Isfahan, was complete. Light rains on the winter wheat were creating an emergency in Azerbaijan, the northwestern province, and much land would need reseeding in the spring. Horace Byrne, later regional director in Tabriz, was sent north to work out a plan to provide seed wheat for these new plantings. A myriad of admin¬ istrative details demanded attention. The problem of setting up to do business in an emergency abroad began to take on large proportions. And always in the background was the matter of negotiation with the Iranians. As the days wore on pessimism turned to certainty that there could be no country agreement before Dr. Bennett’s arrival. He and his party had been expected for several days, but there were the unexplained delays so common in Iran. We planned a Christ¬ mas party at the Darband Hotel, where all our people would be brought together to meet the director. Some of the Point 4 wives were making a neighborly project of decorating a tree. There was still a chance that Dr. and Mrs. Bennett might arrive before Christmas, but the time was growing short.

Country Agreement in Iran

39

I went to the ambassador’s office at five o’clock on December 22 to tell him I thought it unlikely that the plane would come that day. Through the large picture window which opened to a magnificent view of the Elburz Mountains, I watched an icy, foggy dusk settling down. The atmosphere congealed. Visibil¬ ity would be entirely blotted out in a few minutes. At this mo¬ ment someone handed me a note from the airport. Dr. Bennett’s plane had taken off from Baghdad, Iraq, and would arrive at Mehrabad about seven o’clock. I started for the airport. Snow had begun to fall. Except for one antiquated radio beacon and a few rather pale lights around the airport and along the run¬ way, there were then no night aerial navigation aids at Mehra¬ bad. I stopped at the Point 4 office on Sepah Avenue to pick up Ardeshir Zahedi, my principal Iranian assistant, and we hurried on. When we confirmed that the plane was en route I tele¬ phoned for the reception party. At a few minutes after seven Ambassador Henderson, Arde¬ shir and I heard a plane high overhead in the cold darkness. The flares shot from the tower seemed only to emphasize the darkness. Wet snow blew in our faces. In the next thirty-five minutes we heard the plane four times. The last time it was so low that the roar of its motors shook the windows of the airport customs building at our backs. None of us beside the runway could see the plane in the murk, but Ardeshir thought he had seen the glow of a wing blinker. We heard the plane no more. After a few minutes Ardeshir climbed the wood stairs to the control tower for news. “The pilot told the tower ‘I see your lights’ as he came over that last time,” he reported when he re¬ turned. “No word at all since then.” The ambassador shook his head and blinked snow out of his eyes. “Let’s invite the committee to have tea in the airport building.”

40

Mission for Peace

But the people were restive. I suggested that some of our friends quietly persuade members of the committee to disperse. We did not want to alarm them. Ardeshir and I remained at the airport until midnight. He had rustled me a curfew pass. No word came from Baghdad, Basra or Abadan, where alternate landings might have been made. Driving past the embassy on the way home, I was flagged down by a Marine guard. He had just learned from the airport that the plane had arrived safely at Baghdad. I went to bed re¬ lieved and happy. I had been sure we were waiting for news of disaster. The morning of December 23,1951, was startlingly, crystalline clear. A heavy mantle of snow covered the mountains, the hills and even the plain. At the Darband I heard a small plane cir¬ cling over the foothills but paid no attention. At the office an hour later I learned that a search plane had located the wreckage of Dr. Bennett’s airliner. My shock was even deeper because of my trust in the false information of the previous night. No satis¬ factory explanation of that telephone call was ever made. Ardeshir, son of a prominent Iranian general who later be¬ came prime minister, somehow hurriedly obtained a jeep for the trip into the Elburz foothills. We drove through rutted snow as far as roads went, then broke trail. Soon the ground became too rough even for a jeep. At the steep edge of a canyon we began a slow trek toward the reported site of the wreck. On a hilltop we saw a shattered propeller standing like a cross. We rounded a shoulder. In the bottom of the canyon we saw the little that re¬ mained of the plane. All but the wings and tail had burned. The impact had thrown Dr. and Mrs. Bennett forward, clear of the wreckage. They had died instantly. They were still side by side, strapped in their seats. Between them lay a Bible which Mrs. Bennett must have been reading. Most of the twenty-one victims were in the burned wreckage. One of these was Benjamin Hill Hardy, chief of public affairs for the Technical Cooperation Ad-

Country Agreement in Iran

41

ministration, whom President Truman praised as “a convinced idealist” who made “important contributions” to the Point 4 idea. James Thomas Mitchell, a staff photographer, and Albert Cyril Crilley, a foreign service assistant to Dr. Bennett, had also been on the plane. As we drove back to town Ardeshir and I took some comfort in the fact that I had not been able to persuade Si Fryer to return. It was impossible not to talk about Dr. Bennett. Ardeshir lis¬ tened with a friend’s indulgent silence. “I went to say good-by to Dr. Bennett the day before I left Washington,” I said. “It was only about five weeks ago. He said that we had a hard job ahead. An easy job, I told him, would not have attracted me any more than such a task would have drawn him. He said he had absolute confidence in the success of Point 4 because it was right for the great United States to help her neighbors as our pioneer forefathers had co-operated with each other on the frontiers. He added that talk of atom bombs did not frighten him. Then he said, ‘I think you are like me in that we do not scare easily.’ I am sure Dr. Bennett did not scare even at the end.” Ardeshir was one to understand. A tall, handsome young man, he is among the very few I have known whom I believe to be without any sense of fear. He was not reckless beyond reason, but he would and did risk his skin fearlessly when he thought it was important and right to do so. “Right,” to him, meant “in the interests of Iran.” Dr. Harris had brought Ardeshir into Point 4. This was not their first contact. On an earlier advisory mission to Iran Dr. Harris had met his father, General Fazlollah Zahedi, and his

family and had persuaded Ardeshir, then only a boy, to follow him to US AC to complete his education. Persian to the very core, Ardeshir was a generous and consid¬ erate friend. One must know something of his country’s history

to understand how he has been molded. His father was a dis-

42

Mission for Peace

tinguished military commander. He had reached army field grade at an earlier age than any other in Iran’s recent history. He had stopped invading rabble in a mountain valley in 1921 and had pacified rebellious tribes in the 1930s without open war¬ fare. He had been interned by the British during the Second World War, and his son, then just a lad, had not known his father’s fate for months. Rugged and independent, the general had continued to serve his country where and when he could, though his health had been undermined by some of his experi¬ ences. He carried several bullets in him. Ardeshir and his father were deeply attached. “When you believe in a thing deeply, Bill,” Ardeshir ex¬ plained, “you just have to go ahead whether it’s dangerous or not.” In the United States today not many are called on to live dan¬ gerously. But peril is not unusual in Iran. Dr. Bennett would have understood Ardeshir. He had died on a gravel bank by an Iranian mountain stream for something he believed in strongly. Late on the afternoon of Christmas Day we finally completed the last identification of the victims. I returned to the hotel weary and sick at heart. The manager mentioned the forgotten Christmas tree. “You may take it down,” I told him. “I am sorry, Mr. Warne,” he said. “Our little orchestra had learned some of your Christmas carols. Everyone grieves.” During these bad days new technicians kept arriving. Re¬ cruiting in the United States was in full swing. Our growth in numbers alarmed some, who doubted our chances of signing a country agreement. A few, more experienced than I in inter¬ national negotiations, repeatedly urged stopping recruitment. If, as seemed possible, no mission at all were needed in Iran, the cost of assembling one would be wasted. Dispirited one evening shortly after Christmas, I drafted a message that would have had the effect of suspending all further action until an agreement had

Country Agreement in Iran

43

been completed. I decided to hold over sending it until morning. That night it occurred to me that my cable might completely dry up the pipeline diat served us. It certainly would mean sev¬ eral months before recruits started coming again, even if we got an agreement within a few days. It might mean that I had headed the shortest mission to Iran in all history. Someone else would have to take such desperate measures, I concluded, be¬ cause I wouldn’t. Almost the very next day things began look¬ ing up. Early in January 1952 Ambassador Henderson proposed to Washington a new formula for obtaining the required assur¬ ances and received tentative clearance. He presented his plan to Dr. Mossadegh. Within hours the crisis had passed. Satisfactory assurances were given by the prime minister. These he based on a citation of Iran’s commitments to the United Nations. Thus he avoided affronting either his own supernationalists or the neigh¬ bor to the north. I have never ceased to congratulate myself that for once in my life I did not act immediately on reaching a de¬ cision but held unsent that potentially disastrous cable. Months later, in cleaning out the drawer, I found and read it again. With a shudder I burned it. Once we had the assurances, Ambassador Henderson and I began immediately to negotiate with the prime minister for the country agreement. Dr. Mossadegh was not entirely satisfied. He was still complaining about the size of our assistance pro¬ gram. And in one meeting, only half jokingly, he said, “Point 4 resembles an Iranian tarantula. It jumps up and down and scares everybody, but it has never been known to bite.” Even the chuckle with which he accompanied this jibe did not dull its point. It seemed to me to be grossly unfair, since our slowness in starting was at least half his responsibility. Finally one afternoon I took a Farsee translation of the latest and best draft of the agreement from my pocket and laid it on the coverlet at the prime minister’s knee.

44

Mission for Peace

“You said, Mr. Prime Minister, when we had our first meeting in Washington that when I brought this agreement to you, you would sign it,” I reminded him. Dr. Mossadegh dropped the whole posture of bargaining and said seriously, “Please leave it with me until tomorrow. I will • • >> sign it. The draft, with a note he scribbled on a pad, was added to a stack of papers on a small table in the corner behind the bed. I was curious about this pending file. It grew day by day, and it seemed to me that to sort it out and distribute it would be a prodigious task. Later that evening I received a telephone call from Mr. Javaud Busheri, who was then minister of roads and spokesman for the Iranian government. He asked that I come immediately to his house. It was, I found, an old Persian town house completely overgrown by the city, as was our Sepah Avenue office. From the \ucheh one would not suspect that behind the wall was a charming home. The old gate opened into a garden. My first impression was that the garden was completely filled with great Danes. When the beasts quieted a little I counted only four, but the sniffing of even this number much hurried my walk across the courtyard to a door. I scarcely caught a glimpse of the servant who motioned me into a hallway. My impression was of a chadora-wrapped figure and a pale arm beckoning. The minister had apparently been detained somewhere. There was no one in this whole part of the house. I wandered about looking curiously over the magni¬ ficent memorabilia of generations of Busheris. The furniture in houses like this one is apt to be large, heavy and overstuffed. To some of our Western tastes it often seems overdone, but I found that this room hung together. I was especially attracted to a gold-plated piano, which had been given to the minister’s grand¬ father by a Russian nobleman, and to an aquarium filled with papier-mache fishes made by Mr. Busheri’s father. On a low

Country Agreement in Iran

45

table set for tea were a variety of splendidly iced cakes and a dish of pistachio nuts done the Persian way in salt brine that cracked the hard shell open and crusted the kernel. I sampled the nuts and had to devise quickly a means of disposing of the shells when my host entered. Americans in Tehran are forever cleaning pistachio shells out of their pockets and pants’ cuffs. Mr. Busheri took from his pocket the copy of the proposed agreement I had left with Dr. Mossadegh. My first thought was that papers were, after all, not forever lost in the pile on the prime minister’s bedside table. Waving a pencil at various paragraphs, Mr. Busheri said many changes would have to be made. Most of his proposals were for word substitutions. In English the words he suggested seemed synonymous with those he wanted stricken, though in Farsee they may have been different. Here and there he suggested an alteration in phrasing that likewise seemed to have no material effect on the English meaning. Now two sub¬ stantial changes were left. One of these points in dispute concerned exempting from cus¬ toms duty goods imported to Iran by Point 4 for use in the co¬ operative program; the other, extending to our technicians the courtesies granted members of a diplomatic mission. These, I realized, the supernationalists might publicly construe as “con¬ cessions” and so draw fire on Dr. Mossadegh’s government. I said immediately that I thought negotiations from this point should proceed with Dr. Mossadegh himself. I left with the sobering thought that the country agreement, which had seemed so close, might yet be blocked. Early the next day Dr. Mossadegh’s office asked that I call on him. Once again I faced the unpredictable prime minister. His copy of the agreement was before him. I told him that I did not think we could agree to two of the suggestions made by Mr. Busheri and that I hoped he would not press me to do so. While I waited for him to speak I recalled that he had objected to similar provisions when the agreement establishing the Joint

46

Mission for Peace

Commission for Rural Improvement was being considered by General Razmara’s government. The present prime minister had then been a leader of opposition to Razmara in the Majlis (Iranian parliament). It was unlikely he would take a different view now, when he would have to bear directly any censure about “concessions.” Dr. Mossadegh responded as I had thought he would. “This has been discussed,” he said. “Can’t we leave these provisions out of the new agreement?” “Look at it from my point of view,” I urged. “The United States is freely offering a co-operative development program to Iran. It would be impossible to explain to our Congress why we paid duty on such things as jeeps and DDT brought to Iran at our expense to help the Iranian people. And our technicians de¬ serve and elsewhere are accorded the privileges of the diplomatic mission.” Then I added, “I had so much looked forward to the end of these negotiations and a start of work.” “Well,” he said, “go ahead and sign the note. It is satisfactory to me.” And while I did just that, he scribbled on a pad on his knee his draft of a response agreeing to the proposal. This, dated January 20, 1952, reached me the following day. In his reply, the prime minister named a group with whom I was to work. This Cabinet Committee consisted of Dr. Mahammed Ali Maleki, minister of health, who was designated chair¬ man, Dr. Mahmoud Hessabi, minister of education, Engineer Khalil Taleghani, minister of agriculture, and Dr. Ahmad Zanganeh, managing director of the Seven-Year Plan Organiza¬ tion, an agency created in more auspicious times to carry out, using oil revenues, a comprehensive development plan. This group was the hopper into which requests for Point 4 technical co-operation projects were dropped. To this committee I looked

Country Agreement in Iran

47

for the designation of the appropriate person with whom to sign agreements for separate projects. The Cabinet Committee asked me to meet with it. We de¬ cided to hold one formal meeting each week. The men with whom I sat were to help me direct and control expenditures. As our association lengthened I came to appreciate firmly the care with which Dr. Mossadegh had selected them. With the agreement signed, the whole program moved swifdy forward. Come riot or havoc, civil strife or revolution, under Dr. Mossadegh and his successor we progressed month by month toward our goal of improving the level of living in Iran by co¬ operative planning, by instruction and eager response to it, by work shared by Iranians and Americans. But Dr. Mossadegh never permitted a mention of the Joint Commission for Rural Improvement to creep into any formal paper. He stubbornly ignored the existence of the agreements signed by Razmara. But the prime minister’s Cabinet Committee, when it was neces¬ sary, quietly acted as members of the older commission as well. Thus we retained in its full extent the government consent and advice we needed. Even the anomaly of the unrecognized agreement was straightened out eventually. First, Dr. Mossadegh had signed a third agreement in December 1952 creating a Joint Commission for Social and Economic Development. This effectively super¬ seded both the Joint Commission for Rural Improvement and the Cabinet Committee. Then General Zahedi, when he became prime minister, revalidated, in September 1953, all previous agreements, including the one with General Razmara on Octo¬ ber 19, 1950. This last, as has been pointed out, had the distinc¬ tion of being the first agreement in the world under the Point 4 program and was really the beginning of our trial at making humane and neighborly arts serve the interests of international harmony.

Mission/3

Jackasses

t! "*T"ackasses,” Dr. C. S. (Steve) Stephanides, head of the fj Point 4 Livestock Division, patiently explained to me one February day in 1952, “are considered not quite nice in any language. I don’t know why, but it’s true at home too.” Steve’s remarks were inspired by the Communists’ first cam¬ paign against Point 4 in Iran. The first fruits of the Point 4 pro¬ gram were just then beginning to show. In spite of the fact that it was a prodigious task merely to assemble a staff—more than eighty experts were working at that moment—there were still those who exploited a national desperation and impatience to persuade the Iranians that our help was ineffective. Work was actually under way in scores of places in crop improvement, pub¬ lic health and schools. But it was too early for much of it to be evident, and far too soon to look for good results. At the request of the Livestock Bongah, an agency of the Min¬ istry of Agriculture with which our Livestock Division co-oper¬ ated, James R. Dawson had been sent to Nicosia, Island of Cyprus. There he selected ten jacks and ten jennies to be brought to Iran to improve the local breed and to sire stronger mules. The Livestock Bongah bought the animals but had no foreign ex¬ change to pay for shipping them and no expert to select them. Mr. Dawson, a livestock expert, was in Nicosia when I arrived in Tehran. He had a regular Odyssey of trouble getting the jacks and jennies to Iran, but last month they had finally arrived. “If you ask an Iranian farmer how much stock he has,” Steve now went on, “he will say, perhaps, that he has ten head of sheep, two oxen and, ‘excuse me please, a jackass.’ ”

48

Jackasses

49

Being clever propagandists, more clever than wise, I think, the Communists quickly distorted our interest in jackasses and took advantage of the Iranian attitude to ridicule Point 4. The columns of many newspapers of Tudeh (the local Com¬ munist party) stripe said, “Ah, the great United States comes to help Iran and what does Iran get? A few jackasses! The people are hungry, but what do the promises of the wealthy Imperial¬ ists amount to ? Jackasses!” Even one friendly newspaper, only half in jest, published my picture alongside the drawing of a jackass. Radio Moscow tipped its hat to the story and its hand in the campaign by braying thou¬ sands of words about jackasses into Iran every night. The ridicule campaign played acutely on Iranian impatience for immediate results. Our long-range program of development built on technical assistance seemed to many to lag, and delay inevitably chafes when needs are very great. The prime min¬ ister and other advocates of one big, spectacular project had feared a popular reaction of this sort. They argued that at least a big project, involving a lot of busy work around its site, would be evidence that something was being done.

We knew, how¬

ever, that we could make much greater contributions to Iran’s general welfare by leading and educating its citizens. This train¬ ing would multiply its effects by thousands and spread its re¬ sults broadly among all of the people, even though the results might be slow in coming. At first they might be visible in only half a sack more wheat at harvest time for each of the poor farm¬ ers reached. The first tangible effects of the jackass project would be a few hundred sturdy, long-legged mule colts foaled after almost a year. In their pastures they might not be seen by anybody but their owners. But Point 4 is a long-range technical assistance program. And there is simply no escaping the diffi¬ culties that such a program presents at the start when challenges cannot yet be answered by demonstrations of concrete results. Having been a farm boy myself, I naturally doubted that pok-

50

Mission for Peace

ing fun at rustic things was good politics or good propaganda. To city boys, breeding better animals may sound like material for dirty jokes and may call for sniggering. But to country boys it is sound and serious business. The WPA outlived the “Chick Sale” jokes that its privy-building campaign set off. The results of the jackass campaign would probably vindicate it. It would eventually draw attention to the real value of the Point 4 work. Among the masses of the people we would win more approval than censure. But that would come later. Meanwhile I was shaken by the force and volume of the cam¬ paign. One writer advocated that Warne be set on his jackass and sent home. We received anonymous diatribes through the mails. Some Iranian officials became nervous about being seen with us. Still we felt that the reaction was sure to come. The first break came when the Ghashghai tribesmen wired from Shiraz for four of the jacks. Iran is a vast parallelogram of deserts and mountains. Of her 18,000,000 people 4,000,000 are members of nomadic tribes that follow the season and the grass from winter pastures in the low, warm valleys to summer pas¬ tures in the high mountains. “We need to breed better pack an¬ imals for our migrations,” the Ghashghai explained. Then the Iranian Army asked for two dozen for its remount service. Soon from every side came the clamor for Cyprus jacks from breeders who knew the animals’ worth. We couldn’t sup¬ ply a fraction of these demands. For generations the eastern Mediterranean Island of Cyprus has produced jacks sought for breeding throughout that part of the world. The breeding there has been closely controlled for quality. Thus the propaganda against us became unwitting advertis¬ ing. It actually gave the program in rural Iran a great lift. But the propagandists did not see this right away. They didn’t fore¬ see what happened and, of course, didn’t know the tide of opin¬ ion had changed until it was running strongly against them. We

Jackasses

51

knew by the number of requests for jacks. The propaganda cam¬ paign carried on beyond the end of its effectiveness. In March some of the jacks were shown at the Hyderabad Livestock Station. I made a little speech, saying that Point 4 was proud to have been of assistance to the Livestock Bongah in its attempt to meet the needs of the Iranian farmers. I deliberately mentioned the jacks among the breeding stock supplied and had some pictures made with them. A distinguished group was present and many newspapers were represented. There was a general air of surprise that jackasses were not hidden and left out. Madjid Adi, director of the Live¬ stock Bongah, bravely stepped forward too and said that after all Point 4 had taken enough kidding about the jackasses. It was not commonly known, he added, that the Livestock Bongah had bought the jacks and had started the project on its own. Point 4 had contributed technical advice and transportation. Mr. Adi added that the jacks had been royally received in Iran. The Tehran newspaper coverage of the livestock show pretty well took the heart out of the entire ridicule campaign against Point 4. The Communists abruptly changed their propaganda line to attempt to persuade the people that American assistance pro¬ grams were tightening nooses of control about the Iranian neck and that our technicians were spies. Ridicule was used no more. Too much was being done. That tactic couldn’t be profitable again, even for a short time. With some relief I saw the jackass business die out of public print. Imagine my consternation, therefore, when I saw in Newswee\ and some clippings from Associated Press dispatches that the old jacks story was being broadcast generally throughout the United States in the early summer. These reports, probably mailed from Iran, brought cables from the Washington office asking for an explanation. In June 1952 Washington was par-

52

Mission for Peace

ticularly sensitive to criticism of field activities in the host coun¬ tries. I wired back, “There has not been a jackass story here for two or three months.” Newsweek and the Associated Press were apparently unaware that the story ridiculing the jacks was originally anti-Point 4 Communist propaganda. To understand this final chaper in the jackass story a little background is necessary. Except when there were major crises or extraordinary news developments, there were few American reporters in Iran. As¬ sociated Press had a representative there all the time, the New Yor\ Times very frequently for periods of weeks, Time and Life part of the time and others only occasionally. No one ever just stopped off to visit us in going through Iran. Many airlines served Mehrabad Airport, but every flight origi¬ nated or terminated there. Since no flights went through, those who came either on official business or to observe the program had to make a long trip for that purpose alone. As a consequence there were not many visitors. A few senators and some repre¬ sentatives managed to spend a little time in Tehran during trips to study various field problems. Some members of the State Department and of the Foreign Operations Administration and, very rarely, representatives of other government departments managed to get that far. Vice President and Mrs. Nixon made good impressions on a brief trip in the fall of 1953. On two occasions Wick tours of editors, publishers and a few radio-station executives, traveled by chartered plane to visit us briefly. Many of these continued their interest, among them Mrs. Jerene Appleby Harnish, who was in the first of these par¬ ties. Mrs. Harnish is publisher of the Report in my home town, Ontario, California. After a succession of hit-and-run experiences I had a curious conversation with one editor who was present overnight. We were at the ambassador’s residence drinking cocktails.

Jackasses

53

The editor was explaining that he was sorry the plane had ar¬ rived a little late, since his party had hoped to arrive in Tehran at noon. Nevertheless they would take oft on schedule, at nine o’clock the next morning. He enumerated a whole string of capitals in Europe and the Middle East, many of which he had similarly visited and some of which were still in prospect. I asked whether he believed it possible on such a furious trip to learn anything about the people, the issues and the problems of the countries touched on. “Well, no,” he replied, “but I have certainly confirmed a lot of my opinions.” “We can’t be hurt by allegations that we are doing something for the Iranians—even helping them to get some Cyprus jacks here,” I replied to the Washington office cables. “I advocate this line of response: go on about our business.” This proved to be the correct response. Soon earnest advocates urged bringing more jacks. “Jacklift” or “Mule Plane,” as wags on our staff called it, was completed in mid-October 1953, when the Iranian Air Force flew thirty-five Cyprus jacks, hale and hearty, into Mehrabad air¬ port. By then the initial embarrassment of the propaganda attack had so far been forgotten that the second chapter of our adven¬ ture into Cypriote jackasses began in an almost carnival atmos¬ phere. Many officials lined the airstrip to meet the three Air Force C-47 carriers that flew the jacks from Beirut as a training prob¬ lem in air transport. Major General Rqbert A. McClure, head of the United States Army Advisory Group in Iran and an old cav¬ alry officer, had worked out with me the plan in which everyone joined with enthusiasm. The Livestock Bongah and the Re¬ mount Section of the Iranian Army wanted the additional jacks for breeding to extend a project undertaken in 1951. Dr. Charles

54

Mission for Peace

E. Pegg, Point 4 veterinarian, who was in charge of the jacks in flight, coined the puns we used to describe the project. By that time young mules were on display. They were the ma¬ jor exhibit at Tehran’s first national livestock exhibition. No such fine young animals had been seen in Iran in a long time. The demand for the first shipment, advertised as it was by the propaganda attacks, had exceeded all expectations. I took some satisfaction in the fact that these requirements could be met only by importing a little later three times more jackasses than the original order.

Mission/4

The Cabinet Committee Digs In

T

he Cabinet Committee

named by the prime minister in

January was organized in February 1952 and went prompt¬

ly to work. The various field activities started under the old Rural Improvement agreement were now written up as projects, or units of projects. This proved to be a big job. A technician’s inclination is usually to get started on the actual job. Many a good one dislikes to set down on a piece of paper what he plans to do, and almost all find writing the hardest task. This disinclination and inability makes serious administrative problems. American technical colleges have been failing us in one regard, good as they are in most others. They have not been teaching their students to write the English language. It is pathetic to see a man who can solve mathematical equations, make graphs and direct great construction projects chewing up pencils and sweating so that his nose drips, as he tries to complete a description of his project. An experience even more painful is trying to read what he has written after he has gone home to bed exhausted. In the end though, someone has to set the plan down so it can be reviewed and approved. Our program officers— Ralph Workinger, later Jerome Fried and still later Dr. Lucy Adams—had the job of pulling the stuff out of the technicians and putting it in readable shape. The programs had to be re¬ viewed in Washington and justified to the Congress. After the spring of 1952 the program work became more or¬ derly. With all the piecemeal undertakings swept up, related to

55

56

Mission for Peace

central programs and made parts of larger projects, our job was easier. Point 4 in Iran was at first no more than the sum of all its parts. The only way to describe it was to enumerate its activi¬ ties. By early summer this weakness had been corrected. The Cabinet Committee agreed to basic statements that unified and clarified the program. For example, on April 1 Khalil Taleghani, minister of agri¬ culture, and I signed an agreement describing the entire Agri¬ culture Program. The agreement provided that technical men from each of our staffs should “participate jointly in all phases of the planning and direction” of projects to help the “development of agriculture and related fields in Iran through co-operative action.” Through the interchange of “knowledge, skills, and techniques,” the program was to “further the overall economic development of Iran.” As established in this agreement, the Ag¬ ricultural Program was to last five years, until June 30, 1957. If either country wanted to stop it sooner this could be done on three months’ written notice. This document was amended three times and then was rewritten on February 4,1953, to estab¬ lish a joint fund to finance the projects and to extend the pro¬ gram until June 30, 1958. After being amended four times the first extension was revised on September 12, 1953, to extend the program to June 30, 1959. This second extension was amended twice. On December 1,1954, it also was revised to extend its ef¬ fectiveness until June 30, i960. Thus year by year the program crept forward. We agreed each lime that our work should cover a five-year period, which kept moving into the future. The importance of continuity of effort in programs such as those Point 4 launched in Iran cannot be overemphasized. The agency supervising this work has had various names. It has been reorganized several times. At the outset it was the Technical Cooperation Administration, a bureau of the State Department. During the life of this agency our Point 4 field organization in

The Cabinet Committee Digs In

57

Iran was called the TCI—office of Technical Cooperation for Iran. In July 1953 the government agency became the Foreign Operations Administration. The FOA was independent of the State Department, and its administrator, Governor Harold E. Stassen, was accorded rank with cabinet members. The FOA was terminated on June 30, 1955. It was succeeded by the In¬ ternational Cooperation Administration, a semi-independent agency within the State Department. John Hollister headed this agency. When the FOA was organized, the field office in Iran lost its identity as TCI and became USOM/I, or OM/I—United States Operations Mission in Iran. From the very first the people of Iran referred to our work and our office as Asle Chahar, or Point 4. Principle number four might be a more accurate translation. This informal name might have vanished, but no other name was retained long enough to replace it among the people. So Point 4 it remained and Point 4 it is, though formally Point 4 it never was. No matter the name, the program of technical co¬ operation did not change. The benefits of Point 4 grow, accu¬ mulate and multiply year after year, though the level of the program remains the same. The results of training spread as ripples expand in a pond. In Point 4 language program designates a plan for accomplish¬ ment in a broad area; project describes specific work done to further the ends of a program. Thus the importing of jackasses was a project under the agricultural program. An ideal project would follow a prescribed pattern. It would have a life of five years. The first year would be spent in prepara¬ tion—training Iranian technicians, locating sites and importing the required tools and equipment. During the second year the newly trained Iranian technicians would launch the field work and demonstration projects, working through the agency spon¬ soring the project. Activity would reach its peak in the third year. The American technicians, the Iranian technicians and all

58

Mission for Peace

co-operators would then be putting every ounce of energy into the operation of the project. In the fourth year the American technicians would turn their responsibilities over to their Iranian counterparts. And in the fifth year the Iranians would conduct project activities with little or no assistance, except for occasional consultation or advice, from the American technicians. If all projects followed this perfect pattern maximum requirements for technical personnel and supporting funds would be reached in the second and third years. Demand on Point 4 services would fall off rapidly in the fourth and almost disappear in the fifth. In actual experience no project will fit this pattern perfectly. Some actually run through their cycle more quickly than antici¬ pated. Some will require more than five years to reach the point where American technicians may withdraw. The whole Technical Cooperation Program, however, was never designed for a five-year life. The program in Iran was con¬ ceived as a continuous rope pulling that country forward. The rope was to be made up of strands of projects, each five years long. These projects would be intertwined to make a single pro¬ gram for the improvement of the life of the people. New strands will be woven in as the ends of old ones are reached. It is longrange. Agreements similar to one covering the Agriculture Program were made before June 30, 1952, for these fields: health and san¬ itation, education and training, student assistance, industry, sugar importation, transportation, community housing, natural resources development, and communications. Later that year one was added for land distribution. In 1953 similar agreements were signed for public administration and for agrarian develop¬ ment or land reform. One more, labor, was added in 1954. All but two of these programs were designed to move forward from year to year, always projecting five years ahead until either the United States or Iran should call a halt. The two exceptions were those agreements covering sugar importation and aid to Iranian students enrolled in American colleges. These were not designed

The Cabinet Committee Digs In

59

to run on. The sugar importation program has already stopped and started several times and may do so again. It depends on the needs of the season and the amount of ready cash to satisfy the needs. Assistance to students continued, but with a gradually diminishing United States participation. It ended, so far as Point 4 was concerned, on August 31, 1955. Except for these two, each program agreement has been amended and extended about as often as the agriculture agreement, and each has been kept current. Every program agreement called for joint effort in planning and carrying out projects by our technicians and those of the min¬ istries concerned with the particular field covered by the agree¬ ment. I made a flying trip to Washington in April 1952 and stayed into May. I carried a pack of program agreements in my brief case. A few knotty problems had arisen in connection with the one in industry, and the only way to solve them was to talk them out with staff members at headquarters. It was good to be home for a breather. One evening during this hectic visit I showed some pictures to my family at our home in Alexandria, Virginia. They were get¬ ting ready to join me. “Now,” I asked, “do you know where Iran is?” “It looks like Utah,” said Margaret, “but it isn’t in the West.” “No, silly,” Rob, her older brother, said scornfully, “it’s in the Middle East.” “But no one,” observed Jane in her turn, “has defined the Mid¬ dle East.” “It certainly is a long way from home,” their mother remarked mildly. “If I had known it was the same as ancient Persia, I wouldn’t have asked where it was when you phoned from Mon¬ tana last fall.” “Well,” I said, “I’ve found that few Americans know much about it. But it’s a big and important country to mislay.” Iran is vast. Bigger than Alaska, twice as big as Texas, it lies

60

Mission for Peace

deep in the Asian desert between the Caspian Sea and the Persian Gulf. Its location is strategic. Since the dawn of history—very probably even before history was recorded or handed down from generation to generation by stories and traditions—Iran has been the crossroads between East and West, between the Mediter¬ ranean and India and China. Iran also has the longest common frontier with the Soviet Union—1,200 miles—of any nation not a satellite. This fact was never absent from the thoughts of Iranian leaders who wanted to keep their country economically and politically independent. Fundamentally Point 4 was designed to help strengthen Iran’s economy and to help underwrite her political integrity. Iranians will tell you that their country has been invaded thirteen times. The occupation of their land by Alexander the Great of Macedonia effectively ended the Achaemenian era of Persian domination over much of the world from Egypt to India. And, they point out, the occupation of northern Iran by Soviet Russia and southern by Great Britain during World War II brought to an end the reign of Reza Shah, founder of the present Pahlavi dynasty. But much as I wanted to answer all my friends’ questions about the country, I could not take much time from the busi¬ ness that had brought me home. A new complication had arisen. “It begins to look as if you’ll have to get agreements cover¬ ing each project too, Bill,” Si Fryer told me one morning after I had been in Washington about ten days. “You know how lawyers are. This program is new and they keep laying down more legal requirements.” We had just settled the last point at issue in the Industry Program. I was appalled at this new turn. We had expected to refine the program into project statements at leisure as the year progressed. I quickly protested to Si that only a few weeks remained

The Cabinet Committee Digs In

61

before the beginning of the 1953 fiscal year. I was thinking ahead to my return to Tehran. Nightmarish visions rose before me. I foresaw the labor of drafting legally tight language to describe multiferous project activities in detail.

This would

be only the beginning. Our staff would then have to translate the English into exact Farsee by scores, even hundreds, of pages. Making sure that the agreements would operate would require countless hours of staff time. And there would still be the problem of commanding enough attention from the Cabinet Committee and other Iranian officials to review and act on the project agreements. But all the sputtering comment I could muster had no effect. The feeling prevailed that the program agreements that had been negotiated would not be legally binding unless they were backed up by the project agreements drafted in greater detail. I hurried back to Iran and called the staff together. At that time they numbered 114, mostly technicians. Almost without exception each had a part in the intense campaign at hand. The technicians had to discuss in minute detail with their Iranian co-workers exactly how they, together, were to get their pro¬ posed jobs done. Then they had to write down what they dis¬ cussed and explain it to their superiors both in the appropriate Iranian ministry and on our staff. These explanations had to justify any plan to buy equipment and had to state where any additional staff required could be found or how new recruits could be trained. In short, the technicians had to draw up project plans. If a project involved an installation such as a livestock station, a seed-multiplication field, a health center, a demonstration school, a cement mill or a waterworks, the plan not only had to say where it would be placed but also why it would be placed there and not somewhere else. How much native stock was within the effective radius of the proposed livestock station? Did the seed plot have a secure irrigation water supply ? How

62

Mission for Peace

many people could be served from the health center, and what were the major illnesses in the vicinity ? Could the demonstra¬ tion school be easily reached by the numbers of teachers who would observe it? Were there children near by who could be enrolled? How about the raw materials for the cement mill? What was the power supply ? Who owned the water to be used in the waterworks, and how could people be persuaded to tap the mains? After the technicians got the answers to these questions and many more, the accountants had to check the available funds against the estimated needs. Then the personnel officer ap¬ praised the staff requirements, the lawyer, the form and language and the program committee, the appropriateness of the whole project under the program agreements already drawn. Did each project fall within the basic plan to help Iran to help herself to improve the lot of her people? When it had been approved by these various members of our staff the agreement had to be presented in two languages to the Cabinet Committee and stand its scrutiny. If the Cabinet Committee consented it must then command the approval of the head of whatever Iranian ministry would be involved in carrying out the agreement. He, if all went well, would sign the dotted line at the end of a document that was, by that time, really formidable. And just forty-nine days until June 30. All of our projects must be covered by formal agreement by July 1, the start of the new fiscal year. Measured against the time remaining, the details of our job looked overwhelming. We made it. In June the Cabinet Committee met ten times, usually for at least three hours each time. Twenty-nine project agreements were completed that month alone, and when the fiscal year ended we could say that the whole program was safely documented. Three of the four regular members of the Cabinet Committee, all of ministerial rank, attended these meet-

The Cabinet Committee Digs In

63

ings regularly. In addition, die minister of interior, Mr. Mostafa Gholi Ram, attended four meetings; the minister of roads, Mr. Busheri, three; the minister of post, telegraph and telephone, Mr. G. H. Sadighi, two. Also, as required when matters of par¬ ticular interest to them were under consideration, other officials attended. Some of these were Dean M. Attai of Karaj Agricul¬ tural College, Cholam Ali Maykadeh, director general of the Tehran Water Supply Organization, G. H. Ghavami, mayor of Shiraz, Major General Vosough, chief of the Imperial Gen¬ darmerie, as well as technicians of the missions of United Na¬ tions specialized agencies. I never had the heart to tell the Iranian committee members who had worked so untiringly that the lawyers in Washington later decided that it would not have been necessary to complete the project agreements by June 30, 1952. The exercise of pull¬ ing these projects together and firmly defining them was what really made us an organization. By the time it was completed everyone concerned, Iranians and Americans alike, from the ministers down to the one-project technicians, knew what we were trying to do. This sense of objective and unity of purpose carried through. And the pressures of work and time were increased by an¬ other development. As the end of June approached it became obvious that the Mossadegh government was on its last legs. Disorders in the streets were more and more frequent. Controversies sprang up at every hand. Dr. Mossadegh quarreled with the Shah over the prime minister’s demands for power over the Army, tra¬ ditionally responsible only to the Crown. There were schisms within the cabinet. Some of these involved us and called for a new kind of expertness and adroitness. For example, Dr. Hessabi, minister of education and a mem¬ ber of the Cabinet Committee, fell out with Dr. Mossadegh. It was freely reported that the prime minister had asked for his

64

Mission for Peace

resignation and that Dr. Hessabi had refused to give it. Dr. Hessabi contended that the constitution provided a means by which he could be dismissed—namely, by the prime minister’s resigning and bringing down the whole government. The gov¬ ernment since 1905 has been a constitutional monarchy, with an elected Majlis and a Senate, half of the members of which are elected and half appointed by the Shah.

The Cabinet,

though not chosen from the Majlis, is nevertheless responsible to it. As in parlimentary systems, a vote of no confidence in the / Majlis or the resignation of the prime minister dismisses the whole government. It was not considered entirely safe to engage in controversies with the prime minister, at least not in controversies of the scale of that stirred up by Dr. Hessabi. The minister of education began to stay away from his office. At times he carefully avoided going home as well. We had a project agreement ready for his signature. We could not find him, even with the help of his fellow ministers and some of his friends. Finally Clark S. Gregory, my legal counsel, and Reza Ansari, my Iranian as¬ sistant, a retriever who never quit once put on a scent, found Dr. Hessabi in a back room of the public library. There he signed the agreement. Early in July 1952 the Mossadegh government fell. It was not until late August that we again had an organized Iranian group with which to work. Fortunately many weeks had been saved by our June rush. We were able to keep field work in progress all through the desperate and hectic weeks that led in Iran’s capital to the Thirtieth of Tir, 1331—July 21, 1952, by our calendar—when hundreds were killed in the streets. The meaning of the street riots that had so puzzled me a few days after my arrival in Tehran became clear in the upheaval that solidified Dr. Mossadegh’s control.

Political and religious

fanatics ruled the city and won over the moderates a victory that set all of Iran’s clocks turning backward during the next thirteen months.

Mission/5

Clocks Turn Back

O

ne of

the best-known figures in Iran was Seyed Abdol

Ayatollah Kashani, a leader among the Shi’ite sect of Mos¬ lems. He rose to great heights under the regime of Dr. Mossa¬ degh and later fell completely from view.

He acquired a

temporary notoriety on the fanatical anti-foreign—xenophobic is the scholar’s term—phase of the supernationalism that carried Iran so close to the brink of destruction. A leader in Iran may be, as was Ayatollah Kashani, self-pro¬ claimed. The size of his following and degree of loyalty it showed may remain undetermined. It is certain that at the height of his power Ayatollah Kashani could and did influence large numbers of young hoodlums. They appeared at his call in the streets of Tehran as if produced by magic. In 1952 the people of Iran were peculiarly responsive to a revival of “old-time” religion. It was a concomitant of the re¬ treat in politics to old-style ideals. From morning to night the radio chanted or sang the austere, deep-rhythmed Mullah prayers or quotations from the Koran. Agitators stimulated the revivals and derived political profit from them. Responsible Moslem elders of the Shi’a sect, to which most Iranians belong, held aloof and seemed to take little interest in the movement. The religio-political reversal was reflected in the hinterlands and in the cities as well by the return of the women to the chad or a, the veillike cloth worn as a cover from head-to-toe. They ignored the order of Reza Shah that had ended its use twenty-five years earlier. The drive for an “oilless” economy was part of the general

65

66

Mission for Peace

backward movement. Perhaps that drive really motivated the larger movement, since the loss of revenues and foreign ex¬ change after the nationalization of the petroleum industry set the stage for what followed. Iran was being told to seek refuge in her past and to reject all foreign influences. Ayatollah Kashani was an influential figure even before the election of the Seventeenth Majlis early in 1952. (Iranians num¬ ber the convocations of their legislative groups as we do. Hence the Seventeenth Majlis is equivalent to our Eighty-fourth Con¬ gress.) Kashani and a small group of his hard-core supporters were elected to the Majlis. His position was thus greatly en¬ hanced. Hastily organizing their forces, Kashani’s followers succeeded in making him president of the Majlis. This was done in his absence, for he resolutely maintained that a leader of the faith should not be expected to concern himself with mundane duties of government. He therefore never attended a session of the Majlis throughout his term, president or not. His resolution did not keep him from political activity or the exercise of the prestige of his important political office. Holding meetings at his house and at the houses of his friends, Kashani exerted his influence on the Majlis and the prime minister, who, like him, lived in a kind of isolation. The paradox of the two most influential political leaders of the country remaining aloof in their homes amused nobody in Iran. Their insulation only added to the unrealism of the times. The fanatics who responded to Kashani had a record of violence and terrorism. Youths of thirteen and fourteen years had on occasion been selected to act in political assassination plots. A feeling of great power surrounded Ayatollah Kashani. In mid-August 1952 I received a summons to wait upon him at a garden in Tedjrish. With Ardeshir Zahedi I drove to the meet¬ ing-place on a very hot morning. The garden was rather small and the house, while typically Persian, was not elaborate. A num-

Clocks Turn Back

67

ber of young men, some in Mullah robes and some in ordinary dress, scurried about as we entered the hall. One or two, I learned later, were sons of the Ayatollah. Almost immediately we found ourselves in a smallish living room that bulged with heavy, uncomfortable furniture and was distinguished only by a beautiful Persian carpet. Kashani did not rise to receive us but motioned for me to sit beside him on a sofa. Some tea-things were arrayed on a low table. Ardeshir pulled up an ottoman to sit near us. It is not uncommon at such interviews for strangers to at least some of those present to wander in and out, sometimes to stay. A stream of people, in¬ cluding some Mullahs, flowed through the room during our talk. The residue of this stream filtered out and found chairs, joining the circle. The formalities on this occasion were longer than usual. Sip¬ ping our tea likewise took more time. I studied the Ayatollah. He seemed curious about me too. He was a small man, distinctly elderly, with wispy white hair and a full gray beard. He wore the white turban of a Mullah. Over a business suit and white shirt he had drawn a priest’s robe of dark-brown, coarse mohair. The compound in which the house stood was well up the mountain, and the room in which we sat was high ceilinged. It was nevertheless uncomfortably warm on the sofa, especially for one dressed as fully as Kashani. From time to time, for relief, he removed the turban from his sweaty head. I had always thought that the turban was wrapped around the head anew at each wearing. I had seen Indian friends re¬ wrap theirs. But the Ayatollah’s turban simply lifted off. The cloth was sewed or so permanently entwined that the turban was much like a bulky hat. I thought of a ready-tied bow tie. Kashani let me know that he appreciated the interest the United States showed in Iran’s welfare, but he displayed no understanding of our program. He thought the plan to assist rural people to help themselves to better living standards was

68

Mission for Peace

impractical. He hoped, he told me, that the United States, through Point 4, would do “something substantial” for the peo¬ ple of Iran. He said he believed the plight of the people was inclining them toward Communism, which, he added, he ab¬ horred. “In our country,” Ardeshir offered, supplementing what Ayatollah Kashani had said, “we have an old proverb: ‘An empty stomach has neither faith nor loyalty.’ ” Ardeshir quickly repeated this in Farsee to Kashani. The old man beamed and nodded. Given food, he said, the faith of the people would protect them. The friendship between the United States and Iran might be strengthened, he thought, if we built one or two large, spectacular dams. He thought one on the Ziandehrud River near Isfahan and another one on the Karun in Khuzistan Province would just about do the trick. I pointed out that we had only a little more than $23,000,000 for the new fiscal year, an amount almost the same as we had for the 1952 program. He seemed to think that sum was astro¬ nomical. I protested that a dam on the Karun River would be extremely costly. Furthermore, I explained, expenditures for such large projects would be not technical assistance, but largescale economic aid. Kashani finally asked me what I thought the Karun River dam might cost. To understand the answer to this question requires some knowledge of the geography of Iran. The country has only one important river system. This drains the western slope of the Zagros mountains, which run north and south from one end of the country to the other, on the west side of the central plateau. The chief rivers are the Karun and the Ab-e-Diz. The system collects in the Khuzistan Plain, a vast delta. In this dry flat the rivers of Iran join the Tigris and Eu¬ phrates to form the Shat-al-Arab, the single channel through which all empty into the head of the Persian Gulf. Abadan, the refinery and city where the oil controversy centered, is on Abadan island in the Shat-al-Arab. More precisely, it lies between the

Clocks Turn Back

69

main channel and a meandering side channel. The Shat-al-Arab, freighted with the erosion silt of most of Asia Minor, year by year reclaims land from the shallow, brackish waters of the gulf. At the time of Alexander the Great several of these rivers had separate mouths. The invader is reputed to have sailed his fleet to points that now, 2,000 years later, are more than fifty miles inland. In earlier times such streams as the Karun, Ab-e-Diz and Karkeh were used for irrigation, but the old canals have van¬ ished. These waters represent a great source of potential wealth. The Karun resembles our Colorado River. Its flow is about the same, and it too carries a heavy load of silt. The Karun drains distant, snow-covered mountains and has cut a series of magnifi¬ cent canyons. It flows sluggishly through its flat delta which forms a hot, dry but potentially fertile plain. The river keeps building its delta out into a narrow gulf. Unlike the Colorado, however, the Karun is not dammed or controlled. Its power is unused. Bringing it under control for use would be comparable to harnessing the Colorado, a task that, though incomplete, has cost hundreds of millions of dollars. I had visited the Gotwan site, where the Karun emerges into the Khuzistan Plain. A dam there would have to compare with the very largest in the United States. A dam of this size, with project canals to use the river’s waters, would, in my estimation, cost about $350,000,000. I gave Kashani the figure. He thought at least scores of such dams could be built for that. The sum I had quoted was, I believe, a low estimate of the cost of the Khuzistan Plain development. The Ayatollah was completely unrealistic when confronting technical questions. Iran is literally full of monuments to this kind of inexperience. Too many projects have been begun but not completed because the money ran out. The need for planning is one of the hardest lessons for those unfamiliar with resource development to learn. Even after two hours of talk Kashani still had a sneaking sus-

70

Mission for Peace

picion that I was overestimating the cost of the dam to cover up other, unstated reasons for refusing his proposed “useful projects.” I described to the Ayatollah some of Point 4’s many under¬ takings in Iran, starting with the jack project. Our deep-water well program, I told him, was providing pure drinking water for villages and small towns. I discussed our peoples’ working, through the ministry of education, to improve teacher training and teaching methods. I outlined the aims of the malaria-control project and the seed-improvement program. I mentioned our participation in developing the treatment plant for the Tehran water supply, the Fars Cement Plant and an exhaustive list of our other efforts. Still the Ayatollah held stubbornly to his posi¬ tion that we should do “something substantial.” He wondered, he said, whether the United States was really expressing an inter¬ est in Iran and her welfare. Perhaps, he went on, all this pro¬ gram should be discontinued. I had made several efforts to break off our conference. I sensed that the old man was tiring and guessed from the increasing numbers popping in and out of the room that some other ap¬ pointments were probably being delayed. But each time I made an effort to go, Kashani would motion me back to my seat. At almost one o’clock I heard a considerable commotion. Several men entered. Someone announced that luncheon was served. I again tried to excuse myself, but Kashani and his friends swept us along to a lower floor of the house. There a table was lavishly set with Iranian foods. I was seated ceremoniously at the Ayatollah’s right. The others grouped about. As is usual in Iran, there was a high pile of plates in the center of the table. Before us were stews and barbequed chicken, several pilau and other Persian delicacies. It was one of my very few times at table with Iranians when most of them did not use silverware. After lunch Ardeshir and I were taken down still another

Clocks Turn Back

71

flight of stairs to a room opening on the lower gardeii. Here we bade our host adieu. Though it was time for his siesta he said he hated to see us go. There were so many more things he wished to discuss.

1 he fact that I had called on Kashani, though privately as he had requested, was nevertheless reported in the papers. The Ayatollah’s influence can be understood only in terms of the Iranian devotion to religion. Nothing about Iran stirs a visitor more deeply than the response of the people to religious ceremony. The muezzin call over the rooftops at early dawn is as moving as the pealing of bells over a country churchyard. The faithful practice their devotions wherever they happen to be—on a city street or along a donkey track. They bow their heads completely to the ground, facing Mecca and repeating their prayers. They do not disturb and are not disturbed. Beside a jube or a mountain stream I have frequently seen a man wash ceremoniously before prayer, then rise, spread a rug and bow on it to the earth. High and low alike faithfully keep their re¬ ligious traditions. While much of Iran’s great poetry extols fine wine, the Koran’s injunction against alcohol is rather strictly observed. At official functions Iranians drink their toasts in pomegranate juice. Rarely is an intoxicated person seen in the streets. The mosques are the finest buildings in Persia. Some, like the great Blue Mosque in Isfahan, are among the most beautiful in the world. The ceremonies on the day the Shi’as commemorate the martyrdom of Hossein, son of Ali, the Prophet’s son-in-law and fourth Caliph of Islam, to whom the Shi’as trace their branch of the faith, are deeply moving experiences for the whole people. Perhaps there must always be a thin edge of fanaticism in any mass response of such magnitude. In 1952 there was a revival of the old practice of marchers beating their own backs with chains. Yet one could feel encouragement in the resentment

72

Mission for Peace

of the return to the past. The general pleasure in the day was not diminished. The passing in the night of chanting men stirred everyone deeply. About eighty-five per cent of the Iranians are Moslem. The Armenian Christians make up most of the rest, but there are Jews in the cities. Some Zoroastrians, descendants of the fire worshippers, live near Yazd. There is also a sprinkling of Bahais. The Shi’ites of Persia are of the Imami sect, who believe in the divine inspiration of the twelve Imams. The Shi’a heterodoxy is the official religion of Iran, and some assume that its history was founded there. Only the Eighth Imam lived and died on Persian soil. His tomb at Meshed is the outstanding religious shrine of the country. Pilgrims trek there by the tens of thou¬ sands to earn die right, as Meshedis, to wear green turbans. I found the Moslems inclined to accept Americans without thinking of religious differences. Christians, likewise, were apt to accept the Iranians without being conscious of religion. De¬ votion is to God, and the use of the name Allah makes Him no different. In the months following my visit to Kashani it seemed that he was determined to pull Iran down about his ears. He quar¬ reled with almost every public figure. His followers raised new waves of fanatic hate for all that was not Iranian—as they understood the term. While tension was still building Kashani summoned me again. Since I didn’t know his motives, I declined the invitation. It was repeated through a third party but even more anxiously and forcefully. My curiosity was aroused. I agreed to visit him. On a cold spring morning I again set out to meet Kashani. The address he had given was on the far east side of Tehran. I could not remember ever having been on the street, and we had some trouble finding the house, which opened directly off the street with neither compound nor garden. We were admitted into a cold hallway to wait while servants scampered in a swirl

Clocks Turn Back

73

of chadoras to find someone to receive us. A young man finally appeared. He was most surprised to see me. After I had ex¬ plained he said that the Ayatollah was his father-in-law. He had not been told that we were coming. Well, I thought, Kashani really does want secrecy this time! The house was unheated. I sat bundled in my overcoat, still chilled, waiting for the Ayatollah. I remembered noting that this room was as crowded with heavy, uncomfortable furniture as the one where we had first met. A great clattering on the stairs announced Kashani’s arrival —at the head of a train of followers. He did not bother to intro¬ duce most of them, but one or two I knew. Before tea was over a second group clattered up the stairs. This one was composed of newspaper photographers and re¬ porters. They were royally welcomed by Kashani, who grabbed my hand, clutched my thumb in his fist and extended his thumb in a gesture strictly for the cameras. The next day all the papers carried pictures. Mr. Warne, director of Point 4 (bundled up in his overcoat, looking very cold), met with Ayatollah Kashani (very chipper in his robe and turban) to discuss common prob¬ lems. Kashani was evidently on good terms with his guest. The peculiar handclasp made that obvious. Private meeting indeed! The meeting was short. Getting the pictures taken had ap¬ parently been the major objective. Kashani brought up his pro¬ posed Khuzistan Plain development. He was not at all in sym¬ pathy with my compromise suggestion for a series of planning studies to determine how best to place the lands in the hands of the peasantry. The dam should be built. There was no more time, he thought, for planning. In any event, the Ayatollah said that he thought Iran’s future would be better served if the landlord system were extended to the new lands watered by the Karun. He considered the peasants very poor material on which to build a community.

74

Mission for Peace

I mentioned to Kashani the new law for an increase in the farmer’s share, which granted the peasants twenty per cent more from the landlord. Under the law they were also to be organized into councils within the villages so that they could do some things for themselves. This law, Kashani said, might be good politics, but it wasn’t good policy. After this conference I did not see Kashani again. He seems to have been a political phenomenon of those hectic days. When General Zahedi became prime minister in August 1953, his ad¬ ministration began preparations for electing the Eighteenth Majlis, since the old one no longer had a quorum. Kashani had no part in these elections. If he gave his mobsters—whom he had intimated to me he did not direct, but who seemed to answer spontaneously his slightest wish—any further directions, they did not obey them. The Ayatollah went abroad to religious places in Iraq and elsewhere. When he returned, he seemed no longer to be a political factor. The supernationalism that had prepared his way was losing force under Zahedi.

Mission/6

”35,000 Reds Rly to Iran”

W

hy not bring eggs and perhaps even baby chicks from the United States to Iran to improve the scrawny poultry?

The men in the Agriculture Division asked this question as the spring of 1952 approached. The peasants own their chickens. Improving the poultry would benefit the poor people directly. We could make a wide impact quickly. Chicks soon become roosters and hens. Their eggs could then be used to carry the program forward in the second year. The Iranian chicken is a small, wiry, tough little bird. Its eggs are only slightly bigger than a pigeon’s, and it doesn’t lay many. Nevertheless chickens represent a major source of meat for the country people’s austere diet. And four out of five Irani¬ ans are country people. The plan worked out with the Livestock Bongah called for trading a blooded chick for a native chick, a good cockerel for a poor one. Not only would new blood be introduced but the old breeding stock would be diminished at the same time. Dr. E. J. Halbrook, our poultry expert, believed that a simple cross of blood lines, the first cross, would improve the Iranian chicken materially. Repeated crosses, he thought, would probably change Iran’s poultry population completely in five years. No one had had any experience with flying hatching eggs or baby chicks halfway around the world. The distance from San Francisco to Tehran is about the same going either east or west. A baby chick can remain strong and healthy without being

75

76

Mission for Peace

fed or watered for a little over seventy-two hours after it leaves the egg. Hatching eggs, some experts thought, would remain hatchable for much longer periods before they were set. In theory, therefore, we would have a better chance of success if we im¬ ported eggs, since it seemed doubtful chicks could be flown from incubators in Ohio or New Jersey to feeding pens in Tehran within the three-day time limit. Imported eggs could be set in Tehran so the baby chicks would hatch next door to the feeding pens. We decided to bring in 75,000 eggs and to try some experi¬ mental flights of baby chicks. Just as well have two strings to our bow. For several weeks a thousand chicks a week were flown from the east coast. These came through surprisingly well. There were no hitches in plane schedules. Some of the little fellows were several hours over the danger line, but there was no high percentage of loss. Meanwhile, the Agriculture Division prepared to gather enough incubators for a full trial of the second method. Thirtyfive thousand eggs were flow to Tehran and were rushed to incu¬ bators all around and about the city. We filled virtually every incubator we could light. After a few days our men candled a sampling of the eggs. To our consternation few of them seemed to be fertile. When the three-week incubation period ended, only about fifteen per cent of the eggs hatched. Sadly we noted that many chicks were weak and some were deformed. An¬ other batch of eggs was on the way. To our horror we had about the same results with it. Somehow the eggs were being damaged en route, either by the change of air pressure at high altitudes or by the cold. We ordered two large shipments of chicks. The first, of 30,000, was delayed when a chartered plane had motor trouble. The chicks, when they finally arrived, were beyond the seventy-twohour survival limit. Although the pilot and crew had tried to feed and water them in a hangar at the Cairo, Egypt, airport,

”35,000 Reds Fly to Iran"

77

many were dead and others seriously weakened. We were un¬ derstandably depressed when the second chartered plane took off from New York carrying 35,000 New Hampshire Reds just out of the egg. By this time people at home were aware that something un¬ usual was happening. One New York newspaper facetiously headlined a story about this shipment “35,000 Reds Fly to Iran.” The anxiety with which we awaited that plane at the Mehrabad runway can well be imagined. It appeared on schedule, circled once, landed and trundled up. The motors stopped and the door flung open. Never before had I heard such a concert of chirping and cheeping! Nothing was wrong with the lot. We took the chicks out of the boxes to feed, water and warm them and counted the losses at less than one in a hundred. We had solved the problem, but it was too late in the season to bring any more chicks in 1952. To do the job we planned we would have to repeat the project in 1953. We could make some ex¬ changes with the poultry already flown in. Some brood flocks were started that first year, but not enough. We sent four hundred chicks from the second batch to Alan McAnlis, a missionary at the Faraman Orphanage at Kermanshah. In offering to help distribute them he had showed a grati¬ fying awareness of our purpose. His family was sitting down to Sunday dinner when they heard an unfamiliar horn at their compound gate. They hurried to greet a Point 4 truck loaded with hungry, thirsty, travel-weary chicks. Mr. McAnlis and his wife unloaded the chicks into a fenced area, counting them as they went. The count reached 397. The trip had been hard on the chicks. Quite a few were unable to stand. Every suitable pan in the kitchen was borrowed to Water and feed them. “I couldn’t help figuring the amount of feed those birds would consume in a week,” Mr. McAnlis explained later. “And so far as I knew, I was going to have them several weeks. Once earlier we had raised a small batch of chicks with the help of a Point 4

78

Mission for Peace

brooder. They were about ten days old when we got them. After seven weeks nobody had come to take any of them away, though I had told everyone about the chicks and offered to trade them any time. Finally our foreman’s wife brought up seven scrawny, half-grown chicks in exchange. That started the ball rolling. A couple of weeks later the chicks were gone. But they had eaten my budget out of balance.” McAnlis’ first batch of American chicks had been watched carefully, not only by their proud owners but by the owners' neighbors as well. So word traveled quickly when the new chicks arrived. “Before breakfast Monday one of the workmen told me that several people had come to get chicks,” Air. McAnlis said when he told me about it. “By the time I had taken care of them, there were more folks waiting. Finally I had to ask them to wait until I grabbed a quick bite of breakfast. By the time I got out to the chicken yard again more than twenty villagers were wait¬ ing for me. Some of them had hens or roosters under their arms. Others carried baskets of chicks of various sizes. It was a hectic day. I no sooner got one group off my hands than more people arrived. Men and women, boys and girls, from villages near by and several miles away. They came for the American chicks that got so big. Toward evening I tallied up the number of chicks traded off and found we got rid of 354! “Our own chicken yard is built for about forty birds. We were forced to crowd in there the hundreds of chickens we took in trade. Twenty died from suffocation in that overcrowded pen before morning. The orphan children had a good chicken dinner that day. They ate the trade-in chickens that were big enough that day and many times later. That’s one way to cut down over¬ crowding in the chicken yard!” Before sunrise the second morning two men from the village across the river were waiting for their chicks. Soon eighteen people had arrived to trade. To the disappointment of those

”35,000 Reds Fly to Iran”

79

who had brought several chickens Mr. McAnlis had, in order to be fair, to fix a limit of two chicks per person. Before ten o’clock Tuesday every one of the 397 chicks had been distributed to more than ninety different families from seven villages. In 1953, impressed with the success of the first year’s program, we brought 75,000 more chicks to Iran. Many of them were contributed to Point 4 by the heifer project. Some were paid for by the pennies of school children in Ohio. We set up brood flocks at livestock stations in twenty-one different areas, and used the chicks hatched at these stations for trading. It will never again be necessary to bring chicks so far. Good chicks are now being produced all over Iran. The chicken project gave me an opportunity to become better acquainted with the country people of Iran. I welcomed every chance to learn more about this land to which I had been a com¬ plete stranger only a few months before. My already great re¬ spect for the history of the country and its people deepened as my knowledge grew. Archaeologists have said that it may have been in Iran that man first ventured out of the mountains to found settlements based on cultivated agriculture. Mounds of great antiquity dot the plains at the foothills of the Elburz and Zagros mountains. Many isolated communities remain in remote valleys cut off from the rest of the world. There is no proper road, for example, into the Taleghan Valley. Here an estimated 30,000 people live in villages scattered among the fertile flats that separate the dash¬ ing streams and rugged peaks. The Taleghan may be the largest of the valleys cut off from civilization except by donkey trails. It has no wheeled vehicles. Traffic moves at a walk, as it must have even before the first settlement of the world was founded. Commerce, of course, is elemental, and life is close to the selfcontained subsistence level. The livestock is herded on the sur¬ rounding hills, and every tiny plot to which water can be led is farmed by irrigation. The women and the children gather and

80

Mission for Peace

use in many ways all sorts of wild plants in the valley. The men and boys harvest the vegetation on slopes so steep that the un¬ initiated would guess that only goats could scale them. They bundle this brush and weed harvest and carry it laboriously to the villages to save against the incredible cold of the high moun¬ tain winters. In winter wolves—some residents contend even tigers—driven desperate by the snows at higher levels, invade the villages, kill the great sheep dogs and carry off anything they can. Civilization may have moved down from the valley to encircle the earth, but it has sent few of its trappings back home. Even today the principal export of the Taleghan Valley is promis¬ ing young men. It is legend that an unusually large number of Mullahs come from the valley. The reason is supposed to be that during the long, idle winters the religious leaders gather the boys and instruct them. Iran’s mountain fastnesses are historically as well as archaeologically significant. In the next valley was the stronghold of Ali Hassan, known to the crusaders as “the old man of the moun¬ tain.” Ali Hassan held his followers by hashish. He lifted politi¬ cal murder to such a height that the word “assassin” was derived from his methods and time. In this valley too the last fortress held out against the Tartars for 200 years after they had overrun the rest of Iran. Here in 1921 General Zahedi, then the youngest brigadier in the Iranian Army, defeated a Bolshevik army and turned back a modern invasion threat. The general told me the story with great animation when he learned that I planned to visit the Taleghan Valley. Many a surname in Iran has been adopted from a place name. It was from the Taleghan Valley that Khalil Taleghani got his. The valley was the home of his forefathers. Modern Busheris, Kashanis or Isfahanis may have no knowledge of when their families lived in Bushir, Kashan, or Isfahan. But as a boy Khalil visited his grandfather at the ancestral home in Avonek, one of the little villages in the Taleghan Valley.

”35,000 Reds Fly to Iran”

81

Khalil and I had talked for many months about visiting the valley. He had raved about it so much, he said, that his wife longed to see the old places. We decided to get up a small party and go when the snows were off the passes. We assembled a party of eleven. Khalil sent a messenger ahead to round up horses and bring them to the nearest point our jeep could reach. Tents and bedrolls we would take along. We planned to try the fishing in the Taleghan. Khalil thought it might be good. The valley is not far from Tehran. A rough road leads into the mountains from Abeyek, a hundred kilometers west of the city. It passes through a few villages as it climbs but deteriorates into a donkey path before it reaches the summit of the ridge. From this ridge, to the north, falls the valley of the Teleghan River. The pass must be nearly 8,000 feet high. The Taleghan rises in the high mountains northwest of Tehran and flows west for about thirty-five miles. Finally, cutting breath-taking canyons through the ridges to the north, it joins the Saffidrud and flows into the Caspian Sea, below sea level. The people of the valley are not literally landlocked. The sturdier and more venturesome make their way back and forth across either the northern or southern ridges, but the excursion is a daring adventure. The great majority of the people born in the Taleghan Valley never leave it. The principal route lead¬ ing to the outside world is the one we used to enter the valley, up over the southern ridge and down on donkeyback. As we approached the first village a large crowd of men and boys came up the mountain to meet us. Village elders and Kadkhodas were drawn up at the head of the line. Kadkhodas generally are overseers of the land, and may be group leaders of the peasants or representatives of landlords. A heifer was sacrificed. The villagers welcomed and cheered us. I was pleased to hear one great shout, “Zendeh-bad Dowlat Amencaei”— “Long live the government of the United States.” Point 4 was known even here.

82

Mission for Peace

We entered the village through an arch erected over the kucheh. Made of poles, it was covered in traditional fashion with the villagers’ most colorful rugs. An advance guard of one or two men ran ahead of us, trying to shoo the women and chil¬ dren from their vantage places on the roofs. While we observed few women in the streets, we noticed that those on the rooftops paid little attention to the pickets. Their modesty didn’t seem to require them to give up their grandstand seats. As we walked along, a rude door beside the \ucheh opened. A hand reached out. Over our path it waved a brazier of char¬ coal into which esfand, an incense, had been sprinkled. The door pulled shut. Someone else was welcoming us and wishing us well. Children tossed roses in our path from doorways and roofs. The valley is famous for its roses. Its people make a good quality rose water. Iranians believe that the rose was first cultivated in their country. Down a side \ucheh, now and then, we glimpsed quiet tableaux—young women beating clothes in the jubes, a boy prod¬ ding along a donkey so laden with hay that he looked like a moving rick. At one door we saw a child playing, and beside him stood—yes—a pair of big, beautiful Point 4 chickens! Every village along the trail following the Taleghan River was in holiday dress. Each had its similar arch of poles covered with the finest rugs that could be found in the town. In the centers of many of the arches hung mirrors to reflect the evil eye and cause it to frighten itself away. If anyone in the town had such a prized possession, a portrait of the Shah was displayed at the very top of the arch. Sometimes a Koran was suspended as a blessing on the visitors who passed under the arch. In each village the men and the boys would form two long lines facing each other at the approach to the arch. We visitors dismounted a few hundred feet before we reached the welcom¬ ing committee. Grooms would lead our horses around the crowd

"35,000 Reds Fly to Iran"

83

to the far side of the village. We walked down to meet the com¬ mittee and stopped, if we could, the sacrifice of a heifer or a sheep. At every town we listened to a speech or a poem of welcome and received the petitions of the town. “The roads should be im¬ proved. . . . Our bridge was carried away by the spring flood. ... There is no school here.. .. The roads should be improved. ... The people are sick... We need a bridge to reach our fields. . . . The roads should be improved.” We appointed one mem¬ ber of our party secretary to carry all of these messages. And there were thank-yous for the chickens and the visits of the DDT sprayers, who had been through in their fight against malaria. Ofttimes we found the arch and the reception committee just outside the village gate. Whenever this was true we saw the women standing at some vantage point not far away. Only at Avonek, where the villagers apparently felt that Mrs. Taleghani, coming to see her husband’s old home for the first time, had equal rights with the men, did the women and girls make themselves a part of the reception committee. Here one side of the lane was given over to them. They were dressed in their very best. A short ballet-type skirt was fitted over the upper part of the jeans they normally wore. These skirts are colorful, useless and very decorative. I saw them in many parts of Iran at such high occasions as weddings. I asked one of my Iranian friends once how they came to be worn in the remote villages. The story he told me is that a Persian king visited Vienna more than a century ago. Of all the new things he saw, he was most impressed by the ballet. He decreed on his return to his capital that the ladies of his court on certain state occasions should wear the ballet skirt. The style was replaced in the court after a few years but, as so often hap¬ pens, the example was taken up by the higher strata of society.

84

Mission for Peace

It gradually spread until it reached the peasant people in the outlands where, as nowhere else in Iran, the ballet skirt remains high fashion today. At each village, after the formal reception and our walk through the streets, we were invited to have tea with the elders. Usually we sat on a few rugs spread in some grassy spot under the trees. Several men busily attended the samovars. Tea-things and little cakes were laid out. Some fruit was served, usually apples, pears or cucumbers. Frequently during these teas our hosts, who never partici¬ pated in them with us, would sit stiffly in rows of straight-backed chairs brought into the fields for the occasion. The hosts were the older men of the village. Here, as elsewhere in Iran, I was struck by the strength and character in the faces of these old peasants. They were endowed with a natural dignity. The tether of their lives may not have permitted them to wander much beyond the confines of their fields, but they had been plunged deeply into living. Their minds were unlettered, but not en¬ compassed. They wore with self-respect the best clothes they had. If one’s best clothing were a topcoat this rule dictated that one should wear that topcoat, hot though the day might be. The men of rural Iran generally wear Western clothes for dress— mostly dark-colored suits, patched but clean. For work they wear pajamas in hot weather, but not pajamas for tea. Along the noisy river now and again we saw an old mill wheel grinding flour. There are no other industries. The peo¬ ple have hand looms in their homes, and they make a few things, some of which they sell around the mountains. Their principal product is a gaily decorated woolen socklike foot covering for winter wear. The valley people make an excellent mast, yogurt, for local use. They also export some cheeses—by donkeyback up the steep trail leading to Samakabad, on the other side of the mountain, and thence by bus to Tehran. Samakabad is five

"35,000 Reds Fly to Iran"

85

hard hours from the center of the valley, but it is the nearest point buses can reach. The \uchehs of Avonek were squeezed narrow by the mud walls of the houses or compounds on either side. They seemed to be laid out on cowpaths. Some of them were flanked by ditches and shaded by trees. I learned that some curious holes about head high in the well on one side of a \ucheh were the openings of beehives fastened to the inside of the wall. The air was full of bees, all purposefully going about their business. I wondered how many village boys had been bucked abruptly from their donkeys. In Avonek a few of the houses of leading citizens were built with balconies opening through the second floor. This was to me the most remarkable thing about the village. I had not seen anything like it before in Iran. The balconies were quite attrac¬ tive and provided a place for the family to sit in the warm sum¬ mer evenings. “My great-grandfather built a house like that,” Khalil Taleghani explained. “Now there are several of them in the town.” “Do you know what the name Avonek means?” someone asked me. “No, I must confess, I do not.” “Literally translated, it means something like ‘The town of the houses with balconies.’ ” Even here where one felt that our busy Western civilization had never reached, there were unmistakable signs that it had. The doorways were painted with the DDT sign left by our anti¬ malaria sprayers. And, there were the chickens. Already these big red chickens were becoming common sights everywhere. Many stories are told in Iran about the attitude of the villagers toward the Point 4 chickens, which usually are called Asle Chahar or Americai. One of these concerns Warren Silver of our

86

Mission for Peace

embassy. While on a hike deep in the mountains, he stopped at a mud hut in a hidden valley, hoping for a cup of tea. The house¬ holder invited Warren in. He sat cross-legged on the rug while his host’s wife got tea glasses out of a corner and poured tea from the pot steaming at a charcoal grate. With his smattering of Farsee Warren made the man understand that he was an American who had just come from Tehran. Voluble with ex¬ citement, his host hurried him through his tea, motioning War¬ ren to follow, went to a doorway covered by sacking. The man dramatically drew aside the curtain. In the next room Warren saw two chicks happily scampering about a nest that had been prepared for them. “Asle Chahar,” the man kept repeating until he saw that War¬ ren understood. Then there were the two peasants who appeared at the Hyder¬ abad Station one day, each with four chicks to trade. They ex¬ plained in Turkee, the language of the North, that they had come by bus from Azerbaijan, a fifteen-hour trip. When Dr. Halbrook left Iran to go back to the Montana State College at Bozeman in the early summer of 1955, he had the satisfaction of knowing that his poultry project had been suc¬ cessful. By that time there were literally millions of improved cross-bred chickens in Iran. And the breed was being improved by the constant introduction of purebred cockerels, locally raised.

Mission/7

The Thirtieth of Tir

T

hose violent

weeks in July 1952 were a poor time for me

to introduce my family to Iran. Edith and the children

docked at Beirut, Lebanon, after a nineteen-day trip.

The

Mossadegh government had fallen several days earlier. It was generally assumed that Dr. Mossadegh would form a new gov¬ ernment, but he had not yet selected a cabinet when I left by plane to meet the family at the Mediterranean shore. On July 13, when we arrived in Tehran, there was still no cabinet. Dr. Mossadegh contended that without him no new government could be organized. His price was control of the Army and a delegation by the Majlis of full power. The Shah, unwilling to meet Mossadegh’s demands, issued a firman, a royal decree, designating Ahmad Ghavam-Es-Sultaneh prime minister. So decisive a move had not been expected. The designation of a new prime minister, even one as dis¬ tinguished as Ghavam-Es-Sultaneh, came as a shock to the country. Ghavam was more than eighty years old. He had sev¬ eral times previously been prime minister. When he headed the government under the last of the Khadjar kings, both Dr. Mossadegh and Reza Pahlavi, who later became Shah-in-Shah and founded the present dynasty, served in his cabinet—Mossa¬ degh as minister of finance, the latter as minister of war. He had been prime minister in 1946 when the Russians were finally forced out of the northern province of Azerbaijan after Iran’s historic appeal to the United Nations. Immediately after taking office Ghavam made a strong speech declaring that he intended to restore law and order at once.

87

88

Mission for Peace

Unrest became disorder and disorder became riot when the new prime minister failed to obtain Army support for his efforts to combat the mobs. Leaders of the Iran Party, supernationalists and supporters of Dr. Mossadegh, were inciting to violence crowds called out by Kashani. The National Front, which Dr. Mossadegh headed, was never a political party in the American sense. The National Front as an organization did not oppose Ghavam. But some of the elements that sometimes helped to make up the organization did. Except for the Tudeh Party, which had been outlawed as Communistic and foreign-led but which nevertheless was active, there were no disciplined political parties in Iran in that period. There was a multitude of splinter groups, mostly the personal tools of individual politicians. Of these the Iran Party was then the most active. Poor Ghavam, however, had no organization with any form or substance to support him. To my family, so recently come from the quiet suburbs of Washington, everything in Iran was so new that the rapid build¬ up of political tension held no great significance. Many of us had become used to fighting in the streets. Now riotous displays disconcerted us because they emphasized that no effective gov¬ ernment existed. On July 21, 1952, the Thirtieth of Tir, 1331, by the Iranian calendar, Dr. Mossadegh’s supporters made an all-out push to reinstate him. He continued to contend loudly that without him the government could not function. By nightfall the Shah had formally called the doctor back to power. And he called him on Mossadegh’s own terms—full and absolute power for the prime minister. It was a bloody day. Inflamed mobs fought one another. Some gruesome events transpired. One hospital caring for wounded and dying from an earlier affray was raided. The dead were carried off, hoisted by many hands. Grim leaders headed a marching column bound in furious zeal on further depredations.

The Thirtieth of Tir

89

Rioters burned newspaper plants. Other mobs set other estab¬ lishments afire in retaliation. Shops were looted. In the days that followed the family got used to my setting up an emergency office in the garden of our compound. We put card tables on the porch, placed “out” and “in” baskets on them and tried to maintain at least rudimentary office routines. At four o’clock each afternoon the principal staff officers assembled to report and make plans and to try to decide whether to move the office back downtown the next morning. Edith always served tea at these extraordinary staff meetings. Since Margaret and her dog Cookie were locked in the yard they were often underfoot, but we got a surprising amount of work done despite the in¬ formalities. This was a period of great trial to foreigners in Tehran and other Iranian cities. Antiforeign propaganda was on the lips of most factions. It was largely directed against the British, who were blamed for most of Iran’s troubles, but for the first time America and Point 4 were specifically mentioned too. Outside the cities, though, life went on much as though nothing unusual were occurring anywhere in Iran. The villages are not greatly affected by Tehran’s convolutions. Here our people and their Iranian co-workers were calmly going about their work. For six weeks, during which riot, confusion and change left govern¬ ment ineffective, Point 4 continued to operate with little loss of efficiency. One reason, of course, was the completion in June of the Cabinet work. The other, equally important, was the nature of the Iranian village. The Iranian village is without a counterpart in the United States. It is so different from place to place, from rich to poor, from big to small, that it is hard to classify even in Iran. The village is made up of the people who till the soil around it. As the land may be owned, so may a village belong to a landlord. Probably more than forty per cent of Iranian villages are so owned. Thirty per cent more are the property of the Shah or a

90

Mission for Peace

government agency or a shrine such as that which administers the burial place of the Eighth Imam in Meshed. Ownership of a village does not necessarily carry with it all power over the population—the people are not cattle—but it does vest the right to say who may till the soil. And tillage provides the main source of livelihood to most villagers. Until quite recently villagers had little to say about the affairs of the village. The Kadkhodah was usually appointed by the landlord. The gendarmes represented some distant, awesome authority—the government. The Mullah was in charge of the mosque, if the village had one, the holy places and the burial ground. He was also the judge. Iranians say there are 40,000 villages in their country. The figure is a guess; there has never been a census. In Fars Province, where a trial rural census was made with Point 4 help, only a little more than three quarters as many villages were actually found as had been estimated. A village made of mud has little permanence. One need not drive very far along most roads in order to see the husk of one abandoned to ruin. The weather soon melts these down into the earth, though for a decade or more enough walls remain to show that here was once a village. The peasants prize the adobe of old walls as a sort of fertilizer. Something about baking in the sun, rest of the earth from grow¬ ing crops, decay of straw in the bricks and, perhaps, the general habit of facing walls to urinate enriches this chosen mud. It is often broken from its clods and scattered over the land. For the most part people leave their villages as a swarm of bees leave a hive—only to establish another colony. The old village site has some fault. A new one seems better. Since it is hard for a villager to re-establish himself in another village where all of the land is already being used, there is not much shifting about by single families. In recent years peasants have been drifting from the villages into the cities. Tehran has grown from about 700,000 to a present estimate

The Thirtieth of Tir

91

of 1,200,000 in the years since World War II began. Villagers have dislodged themselves from their villages and have found nooks and crannies in the city. Here they put down tender roots. Since there has been no equal growth of industrial employment in Tehran, grave problems have arisen. From among these dis¬ lodged countrymen are recruited the mobs that occasionally sweep through the streets. Whether Tudeh, Kashani or other agitation pulls the trigger the same mass of men at loose ends provides the gun cotton for the explosion that is set off. But in the villages life is relatively well ordered. It may be short and difficult, and of a gray monotony, but things are done as they have been done and people live together as they have learned to live together for 6,000 years. Justice William O. Douglas, who has passed on his observa¬ tions of Iranian rural life in Strange Lands and Friendly People, said, “I have not seen a village between the Mediterranean and the Pacific that was not stirring uneasily.” I have not traveled so extensively as he. But in Iran I have visited many, many villages. I have deliberately tested the justice’s observation there. If I understand an “uneasy stirring,” Justice Douglas is cor¬ rect. The villages of Iran are not individual powder kegs with lighted fuses. They are not so explosive as the cities. No revo¬ lutionary fervor stalks the countryside. These people are not waiting breathlessly for a Moses to lead them out of bondage nor for a Jefferson to crystallize their thinking. They are stirred, how¬ ever, by an aspiration seemingly now common to all men— the hope of a better future. Ill defined, inarticulated, humbly held, this hope is nevertheless stirring everywhere in Iran. Point 4 was fortunately offered to the people of Iran at the right time. Only just now, it would seem, after sixty centuries, would this stirring have been found present. Only now are the village people co-operative and ready. Later, if not enough is attempted now to meet the needs so deeply felt, who can guess the results ? A sinking back into hopelessness and sloth, no more

92

Mission for Peace

to be stirred ? Or a rising wrath in an awakening giant made unreasoning by denial ? Less than a year from the day on which we opened our head¬ quarters office at Sepah Avenue in Tehran it became clear that rural Iran had accepted Point 4 as its hope. But just as what hap¬ pened in Tehran in the summer of 1952 had little effect in the villages, so what was happening in the villages went unnoticed in the cities. The Thirtieth of Tir, in midsummer, came during the time of the most intensive activity in rural Iran. Teacher-training schools were in session. Vital work was being carried on in health and sanitation. Veterinarian teams worked in the mountains with the tribal people. Experimental plantings were being harvested. Chick trading was at its peak. Things were moving. Ambassador Henderson was kind enough to say, on August 28, “both Iran and the United States are indebted to the labors of Point 4 particularly during the recent crisis.” This work, he said, “notably strengthened the friendship between the United States and Iran and furnished incontrovertible evidence of good will on the part of the American people....” Our staff had had its baptism of fire. Its spirit was never higher. Dr. Mossadegh quickly revised his government once he had won his demands. The rioting was held up as exemplification of the popular will. He made many changes in the Cabinet. The Cabinet Committee, with which we worked, had two new mem¬ bers at its next meeting. Dr. Mehdi Azar replaced Dr. Hessabi as minister of education, and Dr. Saber Farmanfarmayan re¬ placed Dr. Maleki at the health ministry. Publicly, at least, a great din was made against Ghavam. The fury of the uprising in the streets, regardless of how it had been incited, had been directed against that helpless old man who, though named prime minister, had been given few tools of gov¬ ernment. A noisy search was made, but he was not found. Nearly everyone suspected that he had never left his bedroom. A law

The Thirtieth of Tir

93

confiscating all his property was enacted to atone for the lawless¬ ness for which he was declared to have been responsible. After General Zahedi became prime minister more than a year later this law was repealed. Ghavam was free to open his door again, but by then his long life was nearly done. For about thirteen months from this time, Iran ran downhill. Dr. Mossadegh, trying desperately to hold a hopeless position, began systematically to take apart the country’s institutions as counterstrokes to opposition to his policies. First he ordered the Army reduced, redeployed and dispersed. Many officers sud¬ denly found themselves at the end of their careers. Then Iran broke relations with Great Britain. Later the prime minister dissolved the Senate. Then Dr. Mossadegh’s supporters—the majority of the membership—resigned from the Majlis, leaving the national legislature totally impotent. Now the minority had no forum in which to raise its insistent questions. Since the Maj¬ lis had delegated all of its powers to Dr. Mossadegh before its majority resigned, the country was governed by the prime min¬ ister’s decree. At the end the Shah himself was under such severe attack that he left the country in tacit protest. Thus he let the people know that they must decide. Throughout this period the tides of violence kept rising, whipped by a frenzy of incitement. There was a correlation between the extremity of the govern¬ ment programs and the degree of depression resulting from repeated failures to arrive at any solution to the oil problem. Without the oil revenues Iran was short forty per cent of her operating budget and a far greater percentage of her normal amount of foreign exchange. The economy, already at low level, was continuing to fall off. The depths to which it receded would be utterly intolerable in any but an economy close from the first to the subsistence level. Mob action in July 1952 was accepted as an expression of public opinion. Organized rabble rousing fomented the demonstra¬ tions leading to the Thirtieth of Tir. Everyone took for granted

94

Mission for Peace

that most of the demonstrators were paid. To the democratic mind it was a wholly new idea that this type of public-opinion poll could bring about such radical changes in the government. By the usual criteria a revolution had taken place. Yet those who were in the villages every day reported remarkably little interest there in the outcome of this clash on which the responsi¬ bility for their government depended. The government was not so vital nor so stable a force in the national life as many other influences. Their culture, their religion and, negatively, the ig¬ norance which opens the way for uninformed popular reactions play a more important part in shaping the lives of the villagers. A common culture, rather than any strong feeling of national unity, binds the Iranians together. Strong as the force of religion is among the people, it does not unite them, for their religion is individualistic. Nor is race the factor. Iran contains a great ad¬ mixture of peoples. Some Armenian villages settled more than three centuries ago by Shah Abbas the Great still hold apart and only grudgingly accept such tokens of amalgamation as domes copied from the mosques on their churches, but they mount crosses on the domes! Language provides no cohesion, for the people are multi-tongued and neighboring tribes may not under¬ stand one another. It is the culture that lends unity, and the apex of its expression is found in poetry. The architectural beauty and fame of the bluedomed mosques, the workmanship, design and color of Persian carpets, the delicate tracery wrought by the silversmiths, the color and distinction of the fine tile, the miniatures, the mosaics —all these are considered important expressions of a common and glorious heritage. But not one is on a plane with poetry. Saadi, Ferdowsi and Hafaez have places of honor and respect in Iran to which even Shakespeare could not aspire among us. Omar Khayyam, the only Persian poet known to most Englishspeaking people, the Iranians will admit was good, but not among the best.

The Thirtieth of Tir

95

“You know,” they will explain, “the English translator, Fitz¬ gerald, who prepared for you the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, was more of a poet than Khayyam himself. No English translator has done justice to our best.” The highest compliment one may pay to an Iranian friend would be to call him a poet. Whether he writes or not, he will undoubtedly be pleased. One who fancies himself sensitive to fine writings will not consider such a compliment frivolously given. He will accept it as an indication of esteem, paid to one recognized as a marcher in the main column of Iranian cultural advancement. Having learned this much about Iranians’ pride in their poetry, I understood the reasoning of a village council in the town of Destgerd-of-the-Cucumbers. The mayor presented a petition asking for help in constructing a school. “Destgerd has no school,” the petition said. “Destgerd needs a school, especially since Destgerdi came from here.” We were standing in the shade of a mud wall, where the mayor and his committee had met us. The \ucheh was too narrow to admit a car. Dr. Moghadam whispered to me that Destgerdi was a minor poet of about 200 years ago. Of course with such a tradition this somnolent village and its few hundred unlettered farmers felt a special obligation. A school might uncover another poet among the urchins following the donkeys to the fields or splashing in the jube. But pride in culture, we learned, is not a strong enough force by itself to persuade a people to advance their general living standards, and lack of a government held stable by political unity strengthens the very foundation of movements such as Point 4 and the Shah’s land reform. These are washed by strong, fitful tides of individual ambitions, jealousies, suspicions and fears when offset by no underlying swell of common national purpose or destiny.

96

Mission for Peace

I came to have a deeper understanding of the dangers stem¬ ming from propaganda designed to undermine our work. De¬ liberately inflammatory, it was designed to accumulate and some day, within a mob, to burst into flames that would consume us. Agitation needed to convince no one, certainly not the majority, nor even a large number. Its only purpose was to prepare a back¬ ground for the carefully incited fury in the streets. Some of the propaganda stories were amusing. On September 25, 1952, Besuye Ayandeh, a Communist-influenced newspaper, reported a press conference of mine as follows: “On Monday, Mr. Warne held a press conference at his office. The purpose of the conference was to show that Point 4 was helping Iran, but Mr. Warne did not say that they have come for imperialistic and military purposes. He did not say that giving aid was only an excuse for carrying out other mischievous aims.” The reporter was right, I had not said any of these things. He had simply reported nothing of what I had said. Of the 101 newspapers publishing in Tehran, no more than three or four were even trying to be objective. Most of the rest were openly for sale to promote any point of view or conduct any form of blackmail. There would have been no limit to con¬ fusion, but three conditions mitigated it. Paper was scarce, edi¬ tions were small and most people could not read. Any number of times various newspapers offered me their support for very small amounts of money or a little newsprint. I refused all such offers. My refusals always brought the threat, often carried out, to attack Point 4. After the heights of emotionalism reached during July 1952 and in view of the number of verbal attacks made on foreigners, I was encouraged when six members of the Majlis came to me for long conferences on Point 4 programs almost immediately after Dr. Mossadegh’s reinstatement. One of my callers was Motamed Demavandi from the city of Pahlavi in Guilan Prov¬ ince. A few days earlier he had raised his voice against Point 4

The Thirtieth of Tir

97

on the floor of the Majlis, in one of the few instances in which this had been done. Ettela at, leading newspaper in Tehran, reported the speech as follows: “Speaking of Point 4, Deputy Demavandi said, ‘I have no idea as to what Point 4 is doing. All I know is that it has done nothing. If it is a propaganda organization it had better stop its operations. If it really means to do anything it must conform its activities to our needs.’ ” When Mr. Demavandi left my office after our conference he said he was moved to apologize and urged me to come to his town as his guest. The Demavandi statement in the Majlis attracted attention in the United States. Several editorials asked whether our work was appreciated abroad. These American editorials, of course, were reported back to Iran. They made members of the govern¬ ment and other Iranians nervous, and we soon received a bliz¬ zard of appreciative statements. At about this time Dr. Mossa¬ degh and I met again. He expressed gratitude for the malaria control project, which was in full swing at the time. I twitted him about his early tarantula comparison. “I remember, Mr. Prime Minister,” I said, “that one time you said Point 4 was like an Iranian tarantula—it jumps up and down and scares people, but doesn’t bite.” Chuckling, he answered, “Now, Mr. Warne, we can say it has taken a little bite.” The anti-American and anti-Point 4 phases of the Tudeh agi¬ tation soon petered out. Our staff reported only one untoward incident in any village. Someone threw a rock at an audio-visual equipment truck of the Tehran regional team one evening in Yantabad Village. The mayor suggested that the team leave and not come back. The truck was to show a health picture and in¬ troduce a water cleanup campaign. Because a member of the health team was ill, no advance contact had been made in this village. H. A. Mathieson, then regional director, said that fortynine other visits to surrounding villages had been made in the

98

Mission for Peace

same week, several of them by the same motioxi picture wagon. No other incidents had been reported. In Isfahan that week our teams made twenty similar visits. Here is a routine report of one of them written by K. David, Iranian technician: On the third of August I went to the village Abar for film showing. On my arrival I met the chief of the village and ar¬ ranged with him about the place and the show. At 8 p.m. I started with the films “Dysentery” and “Cleanli¬ ness Brings Health” in the presence of about eight hundred women and eight hundred men and as usual before starting Mrs. Shrecer [a nurse] explained fully about the films. After the show I asked them if they had any questions, it will be answered and explained to them, but they requested that the film “Dysen¬ tery” to be repeated. So I showed the film again and finished at io p.m. The people of the village were very thankful for the D.D.T. spray. They appreciated the results of it. At this time Jonathan and June Bingham visited us from Washington. Jack was then deputy director of TCA. His work and his book Shirtsleeve Diplomacy have left deep impressions on our technical co-operation programs. The Binghams were well received by the Iranians. Though they had been several weeks on the road, they were ready to go right out into the field to see what really went on, despite the fact that the Thirtieth of Tir was not a month past. We took them to Isfahan and packed every hour of their visit. On the night of August 24 we attended a showing of films at Falarbarjan Village, about twenty kilometers from Isfahan. Four or five hundred men and women, carefully segregated, sat on the hard ground for an hour and a half to see the two films and to hear the explanations that accompanied them. One film dealt with the fight against locusts; the other was about the importance of clean village water supplies. The crowd was intensely inter¬ ested and better behaved than any American movie audience I

The Thirtieth of Tir

99

had ever seen. The viewers reacted audibly even to minor dra¬ matic effects. The film on water supply had been made in a village like Falarbarjan. Though slow-paced and crammed with informative monologue, it was especially well received. The introductory talk by a Point 4 Iranian sanitarian who described the film and told the audience what to look for was followed closely even by the several ten- or twelve-year-old boys- who sat near us. After the picture had been shown, an Iranian public health nurse lectured to drive home the points it made. The villagers listened to every word. It seems to me the best way to appreciate the power of the motion picture is to sit in an audience that is seeing one for the first time. We talked about the experience all the way back to town, riding over rough roads, through dust so thick we could taste it. Jack Bingham had seen some of the recent American editorials, and I had shown him a few of the thank-you letters our office was now receiving. We had discussed before whether we had the right to expect expressions of gratitude for our work. “The only way these people can show their appreciation is to come to the show, sit through it twice and listen to the lectures,” I pointed out. “They’re the ones we’re trying to help,” Jack replied, “and they are inarticulate.” As I bounced and coughed I thought, Their voices must be heard in what they do. They will be eloquent through their ac¬ ceptance of new ways. When the program is appraised its accep¬ tance by the people will be a sounder measure of its worth than the propagandist’s belittling or the official’s kind words of ap¬ preciation.

Mission/8

Six Farsa to Shalamzar

W

hen winter

approaches, the nomadic Bakhtiari people

move from the high Zagros Mountain fastnesses near the

Khurang Tunnel, over Yellow Mountain to the warm desert foothills and the plains of Khuzistan. They were just beginning their autumn trek in October 1952 when I visited the area. I was en route to the tunnel, which, with Point 4 help, was then near¬ ing completion. It would be hard to find anywhere in the world a more color¬ ful spectacle than the Bakhtiari migration. Their distinctive tribal dress, their great herds, flocks and clans, their picturesque camps and their complete good nature make one want to join this people on the move. One of the men, who stood leaning a little against the wind, his black, wide-bottomed trousers flapping around his ankles, told me he would reach Mansurelaman, his winter quarters, in thirteen days. The women, some of them carrying babies in wooden cradles strapped to their backs, were herding donkeys, horses, oxen and cows. The animals were all laden with para¬ phernalia—a few chickens, a sheep-dog pup and, here and there, a little toddler who could not otherwise keep up with the march. The older children urged the sheep and goats along at some distance off the trail. They avoided the roads and paths to seek a little grass farther afield. Shaggy, fierce dogs with their ears clipped to provide less hold in a fight herded strays back into line. The pack animals all wore bells to urge them to step along. Each man and every beast carried something. One teen-age girl bore across her shoulders a wooden plow, long tongue, single-

100

Six Farsa to Shalamzar

101

tree and all. The women wore all their necklaces and trinkets and several layers of clothing—all they had—since that was the easiest way to carry them. It was only the first or second day on the road for those we saw. The holiday atmosphere was strong, especially among the young ones. The nomads number nearly one fourth of Iran’s whole popula¬ tion. They comprise many tribes, of which a few—the Ghashghai, Bakhtiari, Kurds and Turkomen—are very large and con¬ stitute political units to be reckoned with. All the tribes have now been pacified, but many of the older tribesmen once fought in independent armies against the central government. Some of the younger bloods would not be averse to doing so again. These people hold strong loyalties to their tribes, loose-knit, cumber¬ some, tumbleweed organizations that they are. The government has few programs that can reach these wan¬ dering people. They refuse to be tied to clinic buildings, schoolhouses and the clutter of civilization. They leave all dealings with the government to the tribal khans, who sometimes re¬ semble mountain kings. Occasionally groups of tribespeople settle down in villages and abandon the nomadic life, like crystals precipitated out of a saturated solution. The khans explain that if their people could make a living on the land available to them they would all settle down, but, as things stand now, the treks are necessary. This is probably true, but there is still an infectious excitement about the trek that thrills all but the very old and the very young. These tribes are not just tides of people ebbing and flowing over the landscape. They are not indiscriminate about moving into the high mountains or the low valleys to which they journey with the seasons. Each tribe’s paths of migration are well known. And, similarly, the individual clans within the tribes have wellrecognized summer and winter ranges, high or low. These pat¬ terns of geographical fixation were first called to our attention at the Khurang Tunnel. A Bakhtiari subchieftain called on us

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to complain that the tunnel had dried up a few springs that watered one of the pastures used by his clan. We told him that some of the water from the tunnel would be available to his people only a few thousand yards from their usual summer pasture. “No,” the man said, “We cannot consider using that side of the draw. It belongs to another clan.” Our engineers had to work out a way to divert enough water higher up the draw to refill the old water hole. The Bakhtiari tent is typical of those used by most of the tribes. It is low, with one side slanting into the prevailing wind and a flaring opening opposite. The dark-brown sides are made of long strips of mohair woven on crude looms stretched flat on the ground. Piled inside are bags of grain to be ground for bread— usually the product of a field planted and cultivated on the sum¬ mer range—sheepskins used as beds, pack saddles and other paraphernalia. The women cook over outside fires. Usually a litter of pups, a calf or two, a few chickens and, perhaps, a lamb or kid too weak to follow the flock stay with the children in the shade near the front flap. We constantly received requests for special projects for the tribal people. The government had recently set up a special agency to deal with the problems of the tribes. The Iranian min¬ istries now extended some services to tribesmen. Point 4 has co¬ operated in most of these and has assumed the major leadership in some. Our staff devised some special projects, among them a veterinary program and an educational program to serve nomads. Dr. Glen Gagan of Utah designed what we came to call the nomadic school. Its equipment included a tent, special little desks for the pupils to hold on their laps, a set of books and teach¬ ing materials. There was even a small blackboard. The entire school made just one camelload for the march. Young men from the tribe received special teacher training. Eighty-four of these tent schools moved with the Ghashghai tribe the first year. I

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visited one on the day it first opened. It had been set up in the Ghasgouli Bozorg Valley. In the circle of squat, flaring Ghashghai tents the little school stood up like a steeple. About a dozen boys from six to fourteen years of age sat cross-legged on a rug. Each held his boxlike desk. Eagerness was on every student’s face. The khan said simply, “It is the first school we have ever had.” The veterinary service had been unable to move into the field before Point 4 came to Iran. Dr. Hendrik Verselus, our first veterinarian technician, found that anthrax was killing large numbers of sheep in the mountains. Tribal flocks were also plagued with intestinal parasites and liver flukes, which kept sheep and goats in poor condition, if they lived. Dr. Verselus proposed mobile teams to teach tribesmen how to treat their sheep. His suggestion was enthusiastically put into operation. Like Kentucky hill people, who sometimes resist the advances of government agents because they might be “revenooers,” the mountain men of Iran were at first slow to accept at face value the offers of the government. The veterinarians might be tax collectors. But persuasion finally got the tribal shepherds to try their wares. Veterinarians could now move out of their offices and go by jeep or horseback to areas where they could serve most effectively. While some of the tribesmen were skeptical, most of them were very practical about the sheep doctor. Within a short time, some learned to use the vaccination syringe. Many were soon able to mix the medicines and dose the sheep themselves. I asked a Bakhtiari near Yellow Mountain whether he had taken his sheep to be treated. “No,” he said. “If Allah wishes the sheep to be well, they will not get sick.” Several of his fellows protested. “Little worms cause the sick¬ ness,” they explained. “It is not Allah’s will that kills the sheep.” Demonstrations and education are slowly overcoming the old fatalism.

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The Veterinary Bongah, inspired by the co-operative project, took a new lease on life. Its enthusiasm grew by leaps and bounds. Charts showed that the numbers of livestock treated were advancing in geometrical progression. In the fall of 1953 Dr. A. H. Ardalon, director of the Livestock Bongah, and I visited areas in which the tribesmen were treating their own sheep. In a dishlike valley about five miles across I counted twoscore flocks awaiting their turn to come through the chute at the temporary veterinary station. In the Ghashghai country in Fars Province bandits still roam the hills. They swoop down on the roadways and surround un¬ wary motorists. Usually they abscond with the vehicle and with the clothing they strip from its occupants. On one occasion in 1953 a jeep carrying a veterinarian team from our Shiraz regional office was taken by such a band. About twenty men armed with war clubs and a few guns surrounded the jeep. The unfortunate team was made up of Iranians. “You can’t do this to us,” one said. “This is a Point 4 jeep.” “Ah, you are Point 4?” the leader asked. “Yes, we have been out in the mountains treating flocks.” “Oh, then you have the little pills they give the sheep?” the bandit asked. “We have made a long trip, and there are not many left.” “Well,” said the bandit, “give us the pills and you may go on.” From Isfahan to Shalamzar the road climbs through the foot¬ hills of the Bakhtiar mountains. Here and there it passes through vineyards and fields. Sometimes it runs along the banks of ir¬ rigation ditches. But mostly it winds through the desert. We were taking this road deep into the summer range of the Bakhtiari to visit an isolated valley. “How much farther?” we asked. “Six farsa” was the answer—six times as far as a donkey can walk in an hour.

Six Farsa to Shalamzar

105

And again we asked, as the jeep ground slowly over a talus slope, “How much farther?” “Six farsa” came the laconic retort. It was to say, “Who knows?” None of the distances is ever measured. Another time, as we bumped along a donkey path, seeking the river crossing between Shustar and Dizful in the Bakhtiari win¬ ter range, we shouted to a peasant plowing in his field. “How far to the river crossing?” “It is a long way,” he shouted back. “Have you ever been there? How far?” “Yes, I was there.” “Well, how far would you think it is?” The man had come near and stood gazing off into the distance in the direction we were going. “Afoot it is about thirty kilometers,” he said finally. “On a good horse not much over twenty. In that thing,” he added, turning admiringly to our jeep, “it will probably be no more than fifteen.” But to us that day the way to Shalamzar seemed endless. The dust caked on the backs of our jackets and discolored our necks and hair. We made ourselves uncomfortable holding our breaths to avoid inhaling the dust at especially bad places in the road. Then more often than not, we found we must gulp some down anyway. “How far?” “Well, I should say about six farsa to Shalamzar.” At last the trail tortuously climbed a high ridge. Suddenly there opened before us a magnificent view of a long, fiat valley a thou¬ sand feet below. A late afternoon sun slanted across the peaks of the Zagros Divide and filled half the valley with gold. Blue dusk was already deepening on the western side. “Ah, Shalamzar.” And then we saw the manor house, surrounded by a few trees in a tiny village. Wreathed in misty smoke, it rose stately above

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Mission for Peace

the flat, checked fields. As the first evening lights flickered on, it seemed eerily misplaced in this valley, among these mountains, in this century. “Ah, Shalamzar.” Jamshid Samsan, our host, was speaking, “Mr. Warne, you would not think me a sentimental man.” No, I thought, I would not. Unusually tall and bronzed by his hours outdoors, Jamshid, who dressed in English shooting togs, was quick to spot and accurate to shoot the game that roamed these rugged mountains. I would not have thought him a sentimental man. “Well,” he said, “the great house of Shalamzar ... It almost makes me cry to see it again when I have been long away.” “It’s his ancestral home,” Ardeshir explained to me. “His people tend their flocks in this valley. Oh, there will be great excitement in Shalamzar tonight. The master comes home.” It took longer than I would have thought to wind down that mountainous road into the valley. But finally we turned into a corridor of trees and entered the village which served Shalam¬ zar. Men and boys shouted from doorways and ran after us a way. The old guard who swung the gate opening the way into the great garden of Shalamzar was chuckling. “The master comes home.” Laid out in fine proportion, the formal garden held the manor house as a setting holds a jewel. Rippling streams pouring into a pool, and graveled walks and drives led to the door. The broad¬ faced manor house, whose high pillars rose from ground to roof, had, in Persian style, an unimposing ground-floor entrance. Here were rooms for the servants and overseers. On the second floor were the manor hall, the family quarters and the guest rooms, each of which opened on one of the wide porches running from end to end of the building on either side. A stand and some basins stood on one porch at the head of the

Six Farsa to Shalamzar

107

stair. Another old servant offered soap and poured water from a copper ewer. Here we scrubbed off the first layer of dust. A few other guests had arrived before us. Several had not seen each other for many months, so there was much talking and laughing and catching up on news. I was shown to my room. There a small bed had been set up for my son Rob, then fifteen, who had arrived in a second jeep. School had not yet started in Tehran and he was taking advantage of a chance to see Iran with me. Seeming to read my thoughts, my host said, “This is not a European house. It has no bathroom. The servants will bring warm water and basins when you need them. But on such a night as this, after so long a ride in the dust and heat, you will want to see our bath.” He clapped his hands and a servant dressed in wide-bottomed Bakhtiari trousers and brimless domelike tribal hat appeared carrying several big towels. Our host spoke briefly to him in Far see and the man set off, motioning us to follow. We went along the porch and down the stairs to the garden. It was dark by now. The servant carried a lantern, which made flashing shadows along the narrow paths. The servant led us through a door in the compound wall to a room used to store seed. Beyond that was a sheepfold, warm and heavy with good animal smells. The sheep and lambs plunged about to make a way for us. Beyond the next door was a marblefloored room with benches and shelves on either side of a door opening onto a broad, descending hallway. Down this hall, at several levels, I could see vats of steaming water. A real Persian bath. Rob and I decided that we were expected to take off our clothes at the top level, wash our feet in the first vat and continue down to the deep, steaming pools below. The water in the bottom pool was deep enough to come to Rob’s chin, but it was too warm for

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Mission for Peace

long sitting. The only light came from a gasoline lantern, but it was reflected from white-tiled walls. The place was brilliant. I remembered that our host had said his bath had only one inno¬ vation, a shower at the end of the line. It was icy cold. A hunt had been organized for the following morning. When we returned to the house we saw a dozen or more of Shalamzar’s Bakhtiari overseers sitting cross-legged in the cavernous rooms near the stairway on the lower floor. They were cleaning their guns, preparing for the next day’s game.

A huge charcoal

brazier threw a red glow on their faces. In pale lantern light they looked as formidable as a knot of plotters in an Italian opera. Back upstairs we found the hall a scene of great activity. Eight or ten retainers, all male, hurried back and forth between the dining hall and the kitchen with platters of food. The kitchen was on the other side of a door in the wall halfway to the end of the garden. The American colonial practice of keeping the kitchen at arm’s length from the house is still followed in Iran when meals are prepared on open hearths—for the same smoky, smelly reasons. The table was beautiful. The china was fine and old. The silverware was antique. By dinnertime, nine o’clock, so many of the clan had gathered that it would have been impossible for all to be seated. But it is customary at such large dinners for the guests to stand about the table. Sometimes one picks up a plate and moves across the room to talk to another guest, returning to the table for additional helpings. Except that I can never manage very well eating with a fork in my right hand and a plate in my left, I find a great deal to recommend this procedure, so like the American buffet. On the table were pilau and fessenjen, kabobbed chicken, roast lamb, flat breads of several thicknesses, mast and duq, a thinned yogurt usually served from a large bowl with chopped parsley and cucumber slices floating on the surface. Relishes included dill pickles and onions and large slices of Persian melons and cucumbers. For those who might not like

Six Farsa to Shalamzar

109

Persian food there were sausages and prepared cheese from the United States. At Shalamzar, as in so many of the Iranian houses I’d visited, I found the carpeting the most outstanding feature of the decor. Shalamzar’s carpets were made in the village in a private factory supervised during her lifetime by the lady of Shalamzar, Jamshid Samsan’s mother. Though the furniture was not fine, some of the knickknacks, the ancestral portraits and the beautiful silk¬ en quilts were remarkably lovely. This had been a long, hard day. After dinner we went back into the great hall for brandy and the thick Turkish coffee I never learned to like. Almost at the first mention of the hunt planned for early next morning, the party broke up. At Shalam¬ zar’s altitude even in the early fall the nights are chill. Old Iranian houses have no heating facilities so I was glad for the four-inch pile of blankets and quilts on the bed into which I scrambled as quickly as I could. The noise of a truck grinding its way through the garden awakened me at early dawn next morning. My first reaction was surprise that a truck could have been brought over the trails we had followed. It backed up to one of the open rooms at the lower floor. A servant brought me a basin and ewer, and as I shaved on the porch I watched the Bakhtiari subkhans load the truck with tents, carpets and other gear for our noonday camp. From my porch I also saw the beaters ride off on fine horses. They looked like the spearhead of an advancing army leaving a bivouac, armed and ready. It was late morning before we reached the hunting grounds. On the way we passed a number of villages. We had not seen nearly all the valley from the ridge the night before. It opened wide to the north and east. The valley tribe had been settled here for generations, depending on irrigation from the streams. At last we saw half a dozen colorfully marked tents pitched on a long slope. Our camp had tents for lounging, a big, open one

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Mission for Peace

with a long, protruding flap for a kitchen and a great one for a dining hall. Other smaller tents were scattered here and there. The beaters had staked their horses in a string. Several of the guests were admiring them. I tried one, a beautiful black stal¬ lion, but I found that he neither knew English nor appreciated my western cowboy touch. Many Iranian horses seem smaller than one knowing their bloodlines would expect. But there are a number of fine stables of Turkoman Arabians, and now and then a horse fancier spies one that thoroughly lives up to his ex¬ pectations. There were several such really excellent horses in this group. The subkhans who were acting as beaters for the party rode into the far hills. We took jeeps up a draw in a quartering direc¬ tion. In a saddle between two mountains we came upon a string of blinds about waist high, built of stones piled on one another. We had to repair the sections that had collapsed since the last hunt. Before our party dispersed, the host repeated the rules of the hunt. All hunters were to stay behind their blinds. Once situ¬ ated, we were forbidden to talk or make any noise. There was to be no shooting until the game drew near. If an animal ap¬ proached, the men in the blind nearest it would, of course, have first shot. We paired off and headed for the blinds, taking canteens of water with us. The sun was by this time beating down, and we knew we might have to wait for hours. Jamshid Samsan and I picked a blind near the center of the string. It didn’t need much repairing. At that altitude hoisting several tons of rock didn’t appeal to either of us. We squatted down cross-legged behind the blind and laid out our guns. I had a very fine Belgian shotgun which one of the Samsans had lent me, and a short-barreled rifle that belonged to Ardeshir. An hour passed. All the blinds were by this time completely

Six Farsa to Shalamzar

111

repaired. Every hunter had disappeared. Rob, I knew, was in the blind just to my left, and a little higher on the mountainside. He was armed with a .22-caliber target rifle I had given him for Christmas several years before. The subchieftain who accom¬ panied him had an excellent reputation as a hunter, but could not speak a word of English. I knew there would be very little talking in that blind. We waited well into the second hour. Jamshid dozed off. My eyes were tired from scanning the great, rocky mountainside. Several times I thought I saw something move, but what I took to be moving specks out on the mountain were only shadows formed as the changing light struck the peculiarly shaded rocks. I still watched carefully. Down the mountainside came a pair of wolves, a huge male leading. The female leaped and trotted after. We had really come after gazelle and mouflon. The wolves, more canny and cautious than other game, were probably leading a general flight before the beaters. Apparently no one else had seen them. When they were within a few hundred yards I awakened Jamshid and pointed them out to him. He became as excited as I. We loaded our shotguns with heavy buckshot. The wolves came straight toward us. Jamshid jumped up and took two quick shots at the male. The wolf was hit, but loped past us. The female stood a moment, transfixed, then turned to flee. Too late. I heard firing from several blinds now and wondered whether some other game offered. The male wolf had made his way to¬ ward the top of the mountain to our rear. He was hopelessly out of range. Puffs of dust kicked up in his wake as my bullets urged him across the slope. All the hunters stood about, waving their arms. No other game appeared. We had frightened it clear out of the country with our fusillade at the wolves. We looked up and saw the beaters making their way down the mountainside. They said they had

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Mission for Peace

seen many gazelles and a few mouflon. When we asked where they had gone the beaters simply shrugged. One said, “The other way.” Two men insisted on taking a jeep to see if they could find the big wolf. I didn’t see how a fatally wounded wolf could possibly lope up and across a mountainside. But after forty minutes they brought him back. My shots couldn’t have made any of the marks on his coat, but Rob’s .22 had evidently nicked him in the neck. Iranian hunts are more than merely sport. For instance, our bag of two wolves in an hour would save as many sheep as an hour’s work by the veterinary team on its way to this valley. Not that we had the protection of sheep in mind when we set out. Back at camp a magnificent lunch had been laid out. Kabobbed lamb and gazelle which some beater had thoughtfully saved from an earlier hunt. We stretched out on carpets for siestas or sat on pillows in the shade of one of the tents. Someone started strumming a guitar. The music died suddenly in a great uproar from another tent, where many of the Bakhtiari sat about cleaning their rifles and shotguns. “This is a really hot political argument,” Ardeshir explained. “They’re the Bakhtiari going against Dr. Mossadegh.” The loud debate continued. Ardeshir rolled to his side and leaned on his elbow, listening. “Some of them are for the gov¬ ernment,” he said simply. “But most of them are for the Shah and dead set against Dr. Mossadegh.” I recalled this dispute months later, when a Bakhtiari chieftain went to war against the Mossadegh government. He led a band of armed men partway down these mountains. An Army task force met him. I learned little more of the action but I did dis¬ cover that some of the men who had argued in the tent that hot afternoon were in the chieftain’s band. Night fell before we returned to the garden of Shalamzar. One jeep lagged far behind. We were gathered in the great hall

Six Farsa to Shalamzar

113

explaining away our bad luck to those who didn’t make the hunt when it finally straggled in. One of the brothers Samsan rushed into the hall carrying a two-foot sword, a black teapot and a few other trinkets. “Where on earth did you get those?” someone demanded. “I took them from a robber,” he said, still visibly excited. He had trailed our procession, he explained, in order to help if anyone had trouble. As he passed through a village perhaps seven miles back down the road a peasant had flagged him down, shouting, “I’ve been robbed.” Mr. Samsan took the man into his jeep. Badly shaken, the peasant explained that the robber had threatened to slit his throat with a sword. He had stolen the poor man’s donkey and his water jug. Mr. Samsan forced his jeep across the fields and through the ditches. Not far beyond the place in the desert where the robbery had occurred the headlights pinpointed a man with two donkeys. As the jeep closed in, Mr. Samsan rose to his feet and shouted the robber to a halt. He trained his rifle on the man. “My peasant says you robbed him and that the donkey there on the left is his,” the lord of Shalamzar shouted. “I have a rifle. Do not move.” The robber stood transfixed. The men in the jeep could see the sword shining at his belt. “Don’t shoot,” he screamed. “Don’t shoot. I’ll return everything I’ve taken.” “Shall I kill him ?” the lord asked his peasant. “He’s the robber all right.” “No,” the peasant said, “He will give back my donkey. It isn’t necessary to shoot him.” “Leave the things in a pile there by the ditch,” Mr. Samsan commanded. “If you ever come back to a village of Shalamzar I shall kill you.” The robber ran into the wilderness leaving everything he car¬ ried behind. The peasant quickly identified his small possessions.

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Mission for Peace

He took them and both donkeys. Still lying on the ground were the sword, the blackened teapot, and the few other trifles that Mr. Samsan was now showing about the great hall. With mock ceremony, he presented the sword as a trophy to one of the guests. What affected me most about this incident was the unquestion¬ ing acceptance by peasant, robber, Lord Samsan and now his guests of the feudal proprietor’s absolute authority within his demesne. To my twentieth-century Western mind this came as a shock. I do not mean to be stuffy about this ancient system, which still prevails in about a third of Iran. Feudalism once covered most of the civilized world, but it has been superseded in most places by governments allowing more general participation. The lords of Shalamzar were exceptionally kind and hospit¬ able to me. I do not mean to imply even the slightest criticism of them. Their concern for their villagers is sincere. They have been educated in the best European schools, and they take their responsibilities at Shalamzar seriously. On that evening in the great hall at least one of them strongly and cogently argued for Dr. Mossadegh’s recently instituted reform to increase the farmer’s share of the landlord’s profit. The prime minister had decreed that landlords pay from their share an additional twenty per cent to the peasants. Half of the increase would go to the individual peasant sharecropper. Half would be credited to a council elected by the villagers. Council funds would be used on projects designed to improve the community in which the peas¬ ants lived. As an outsider I had thought my view of this very significant step would be more objective than the landlords’. I did not think them likely to support it, since it was well designed to hasten the day when the feudal system would disappear. It would create in villages an institution, the council, which eventually could pro¬ vide the leadership, guidance and direction that were the only remaining justification for the landlords’ existence.

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But in the gentility of this drawing room all recognized and few disapproved of the fact that the ancient order was crumbling under its own weight. Many centuries had passed this isolated valley by, and, except for the Samsan brothers and a few of their friends who had come from abroad, only a handful of the thou¬ sands of valley people had ever been beyond the crest of the ridges on either side. The major-domo of Shalamzar had been to Isfahan. He had heard of Point 4 too. He caught me alone and asked if I could not give him a job in the Isfahan regional office. To him, as to people everywhere in Iran, Point 4 looked like an avenue of hope leading into the future.

Mission/9

Yankee Go Home

T

his is

not the story of the Iranian oil controversy. If it were,

someone else would have to tell it. But just as the petrol¬ eum problem figured in the developing crisis that in 1951 had taken me to Iran, so it touched the program later from time to time. The presentation on August 30, 1952, of the joint TrumanChurchill note proposing a friendly settlement of the Iranian oil problem was undoubtedly the biggest and most significant news in Iran in that period. Dr. Mossadegh had just reorganized his government after the July overturn. At the time it was clear to us that the definite reaction to this note would express the new official and popular reaction to Point 4 in Iran. Flat rejection of the proposal would not mean flat rejection of Point 4, of course, but it would end the salubrious climate in which our program had prospered. Settlement of the oil dispute was an obvious pre¬ requisite to any long-range success of Point 4 or any other con¬ structive program in Iran. Hopes raised by the note were dashed when the Mossadegh government rejected it. In late autumn the British yielded to pressure and closed their embassy. There was a rather sad little picnic at Karadj to bid good-by to George Middleton, the charge. This was the season of portents. General Zahedi on the floor of the Senate had voiced some disapproval of the Mossadegh policies. The prime minister, in the midst of a conference on some other subject, turned to me and said he felt that Ardeshir Zahedi should not work in Point 4.

116

Yankee Go Home

117

“He is using his position in a co-operating agency for political purposes,” he said. “He has struck my father in his most sensitive spot,” Ardeshir said when I told him what had occurred. Knowing something of the closeness between father and son, I knew this was true. It was a sad parting. Ardeshir insisted on going, but asked to be put on indefinite leave without pay. “I’ll still have a tie to Point 4,” he said. That is the way we arranged it. Opposition to Gen¬ eral Zahedi became implacable and firm. Soon he had to take refuge in the Senate chamber for his own safety, though in doing so, as it turned out, he imperiled the Senate itself. The withdrawal of the Bristish, against whom the full force of the general xenophobia had been turned, was apparently the signal for the beginning in earnest of “Yankee Go Home.” Point 4 was selected as the key target of the anti-American attack. A Tudeh newspaper called Baba Adam (Mr. Man) led off: “The TCI (Point 4) lady typists will make friends with sev¬ eral Iranian men, and not just one, to improve ‘stock breeding.’ ” The article included more suggestive and scurrilous items. It ended by saying that Point 4 would allow only papers that pub¬ lished news favorable to it to get newsprint. “More guns and tanks,” the article declared, “will be sent to Iran.” This drew immediate replies. On December 26, 1952, Irane-ma said: “But we do not care for the Communist Tudeh party and its papers because it is clear that they are agents of a foreign country, namely U.S.S.R., and they aim at nothing but the dom¬ ination of the U.S.S.R. over Iran.” Our program for the 1953 fiscal year had just been approved. Another $23,000,000 had been allotted late in December 1952 to permit us to enter project agreements. Just before Christmas Dr. Mossadegh and I signed a revision of the country agreement which created the Iran-United States Joint Commission for Social and Economic Development. This

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Mission for Peace

was important because the new commission replaced both the throttled Joint Commission for Rural Improvement and the Iranian Cabinet Committee, which, while I sat with it, was not in the same sense jointly operated. The official co-operation, as this showed, continued to be good. One of the first projects to be considered in the new fiscal year was to equip and finance a program for the control of locusts during the approaching season. From time immemorial locusts have each spring wafted out of Africa and leapfrogged their way in a relay of generations across the Middle East and into India. They lay their eggs in the ground and, if rainfall and other factors are favorable, the tiny young hoppers come boiling up in myriads to begin eating their way to adulthood. When they are about three inches long they develop gauzy wings. Then hordes of them take to the air and migrate generally eastward, helped along by prevailing winds. They fall to earth like a blanket, lay more eggs in different earth and start the process all over again. Each year, as the season advances, plagues of these pests wing their way along the age-old route. They cross Iran in April and May. If rains at just the right time have made the soils at the relay points just soft enough and the desert and fields just green enough, great hatches occur. Under these ideal conditions most of the hoppers survive. Clouds of locusts appear in Old Testa¬ ment fashion. This happens very infrequently, but the people of Iran have an atavistic fear each year that the advancing season may this time bring locust devastation. Even in years of normal locust infestation some fields and a few large areas are ravaged, stripped of all greenery by the ravening insects. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, Point 4 and other agencies have attacked the locust problem in recent years on a regional basis. The nations of the Middle East have co-ordinated their work. A regional FAO team has co¬ operated with them. A Point 4 regional organization was oper¬ ating out of Beirut, Lebanon, under William Mabee of the

Yankee Go Home

119

United States Department of Agriculture. Point 4 missions also assisted the agencies of the individual countries to carry out cam¬ paigns within their borders. Locusts are fought by poisoning the ground around their hatching areas and by spraying the crawl¬ ing hoppers from midget planes flown three or four feet above the ground in crop-dusting fashion. The locust-control project was one of the first we undertook in Iran. In 1951 Point 4 had bought six little planes and donated them to the Agriculture Ministry. These, with crews trained by Point 4, became the core of the ministry’s locust-fighting army. Each year the locust fighters had keep the depredation in Iran to a low minimum. Everyone, however, felt that more new planes were needed. Funds were allotted by our Washington office to meet the needs of the plan presented from Iran. In December 1952 we signed a locust-control project agreement for the next year. Our latest program plan included the purchase of an additional halfdozen small planes equipped as sprayers. A combination of events was to make their purchase most embarrassing a little later. Russia also had an interest in the regional locust-control pro¬ gram since several Soviet provinces at times are invaded by pestilential flights from Iran. The Russians offered to send ten spray planes to help out. A year earlier a flight of Russian spray planes had spent a few weeks of the locust season in the remote area of Iran east of Kerman. Meantime earnest efforts to reach an agreement on oil con¬ tinued. Ambassador Henderson took the lead, despite the rejec¬ tion of the Truman-Churchill note and the departure of the British. In the early part of January 1953 the prospects for a settlement looked brighter every day. Finally it seemed that a tentative agreement had been reached. All that remained was one last conference between Dr. Mossadegh and his advisors on petroleum. Apparently they fell out, because the next day nego-

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tiations collapsed. Arbitrators could find no way to reopen the discussions for a year. Almost two years passed before an agree¬ ment was finally reached. During this time we had some very difficult days. At about the time the oil negotiations were broken off, I be¬ latedly learned that the Congress had included in the appropria¬ tion act which made our funds available a provision that none of the money could be used to buy airplanes. We had to back out of our agreement to supply new planes for Iran’s locustcontrol program. Point 4 field work continued, indeed was intensified, during the early months of 1953, while the position of Iran continued to deteriorate and the “Yankee Go Home” campaign reached its highest pitch. By January 31, 1953, a statistical study showed thirty-five separate program activities were under way in the Tehran region alone. There were, besides, twenty-two in the Isfahan region, twenty-one in the Tabriz, twenty in the Shiraz, nineteen in the Caspian, fourteen in the Kerman, twenty-four in the Rezaieh, eleven in the Meshed, ten in the Ahwaz and twelve in the Kermanshah. But street demonstrations called chaloo\s, a Farsee word mean¬ ing crowds, broke out frequently in the cities. Professor Hoyt Turner, our education director, during these tense days visited one of the Tehran schools using our new teaching methods. He asked about the activity of an unusually noisy playground group and received the amazing reply, “Oh, they are practicing at demonstrating.” They take their politics seriously at an early age in Iran. This apparently, was a kind of civics class. “Yankee Go Home,” to look at the anti-American campaign a little more closely, is a slogan by which Communist sympa¬ thizers have expressed their opposition to American postwar programs in Europe, Africa and Asia. The slogan is supported

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everywhere by propaganda aids. Picasso’s Dove of Peace, for example, is engraved on a card bearing a similar message in whatever language is locally spoken—Farsee in Iran. The cam¬ paign was inspired by outsiders in Iran as it had been in France, Italy, western Germany and elsewhere. It builds on whatever it can find for a foundation. “Yankee Go Home” in Iran got under way in earnest at the time the British were expelled. Earlier, only an occasional sign had appeared on a wall. With the British gone a carefully nur¬ tured distrust of foreigners was directed against the Americans, the largest foreign group left in the country. Point 4 was the most vulnerable target. If it had been eliminated the campaign would have been intensified against other Americans. And if the Yankees had gone home the campaign would have been directed against another group until it had reached its major objective— the elimination of all foreign influence in Iran except that ap¬ proved by those who directed the campaign. At that point antiforeign feeling would be suppressed. “Yankee Go Home” expressed an antagonistic reaction to the efforts of the United States to help Iran. We believed that help¬ ing Iran to help herself would make peace more secure. We knew we would have to expect opposition from those who in¬ terpreted this objective as antagonistic to their ends. A campaign of propaganda fought our program of friendly, co-operative ac¬ tion. But our opponents’ words did not seem very effective measured against our deeds. The converts propaganda made were far fewer than those who recognized the basic friendship behind the American co-operative program. The advocates of “Yankee Go Home” were a puny minority. Of course the campaign was a source of some annoyance. But it also provided some merriment among our staff members. It was not pleasant, of course, to have the animosity of even a minority, but it brought its laughs. When some teen-age boys

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Mission for Peace

shouted, “Yankee Go Home” at one of our technicians, he re¬ plied, “lnshallah (if God wills).” He sounded so hopeful that everyone joined in the laughter. Two or three boys called “Yankee Go Home” at a couple on the street. The husband said, “They didn’t mean me, I’m a Canadian.” “They didn’t mean me either,” answered his wife. “I’m from Georgia.” An American who surprised a small boy laboriously spelling out “Y-a-n-k-e-e” on a wall offered him ba\hsheesh (money as a gratuity) and bought his brush for yel{ toman, one ten-rial piece, about the value of a dime then. The agricultural division debated adopting as its motto one of the signs which had a slight spelling deficiency. It said “Yankee Go Hoe.” A regional director, tired of waiting for re¬ cruits, cried “Yankee Come Hither” by cable. In short, those who faced the onslaught did so with characteristic Yankee attitudes. Our greatest worry was that Americans back home might misread the campaign as evidence of our program’s weakness. It was, in fact, proof positive that the program was considered too strong by those who wanted Iran to renounce her co-opera¬ tion with us. They wanted Point 4 to fail of its goal. It is easy to be flip and editorialize against cramming United States taxpayers’ hard-earned money into the pockets of people who only berate us for it. This brittle reaction seeks no answers to what may be behind a “Yankee Go Home” campaign. Nor does it ask what the alternatives may be, or who and how many are the vociferous critics and brickbat throwers. The absolute fact is that the vast majority of Iranians appreciate the American friendship and earnestly desired to co-operate in our program. Before any American foreign-aid program is launched each recipient nation must make its request and accommodate itself to the requirements of United States. This help is not forced on anyone. Most host governments seize an ample number of op-

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123

portunities to demonstrate in a dignified way their appreciation of what the United States is doing. For the most part their procla¬ mations or statements are given very little publicity in the United States. But it is fashionable for some politicians, editors and other leaders of thought to stamp their feet and pound their tables in irritation if an expression of appreciation up to their standards is not immediately forthcoming after every publicized step in the progress of foreign-aid programs. Right in the midst of the “Yankee Go Home” build-up Ahmad Fallahi, the governor of Mahallat, made this speech at the dedi¬ cation of a livestock station: According to the available evidence and its brilliant history the Iranian nation has once been the source of world civilization and has led many great countries of that time, but unfortunately, during the past two centuries colonizing powers have plundered our wealth, bereaved us of our possessions and have frustrated our efforts and struggles toward any progress. The Iranian peoples are thankful toward the philanthropic government of the United States of America who with a view of assisting them has started its technical and economic aid with close and faithful co-operation with our national government. The population of Mahallat heartily appreciate your efforts for the development and improvement of our country. You are in fact representing the United States government in inaugurating this livestock station. Be assured that just as the Iranian people cannot forget the tyranny and oppressions of the imperialistic powers they will not in the same manner forget the genuineness of your friendship which they will always recall with the deep¬ est appreciation. A multitude of similar instances showed that our hand of friendship had been warmly grasped. But let me get back to the story of the developments in the spring of 1953. Dr. Mossadegh proclaimed the construction of an “oil-less economy” for Iran. Through February he was faced

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Mission for Peace

with increasingly grave economic problems. Vexed at the fact that the Senate provided a refuge for General Zahedi, he decided to eliminate that body. Rumors began to fly, as the Senate be¬ came shaky, that the Shah would leave Iran “for a holiday” in Europe. Announcement of the trip was an obscure weapon of political retribution. Half the senators were appointed by the Shah. The rumors were interpreted as the Shah’s protest against Dr. Mossadegh. Great crowds demonstrated against their ruler’s leaving. Others paraded in favor of it. When they met, they fought. Once I caught a brief glimpse of Ardeshir, my first in a long time. He was swinging from the gate of the Royal Palace, exhorting a mob. When the time set for His Imperial Majesty to make his trip arrived, Dr. Mossadegh called at the palace, on February 29, 1953,to bid him Godspeed. It was the first time the prime min¬ ister had left his house in months. What occurred during his absence was laconically reported in Keyhan on March 1: DISTURBANCE AT THE HOUSE OF DR. MOSSADEGH—At a meeting of the Majlis the Prime Minister, Dr. Mossadegh, told the deputies about the recent disturbances and the attack on his house. He said: “At 11 a.m. I went to the Imperial Court with the Ministers and there I saw a crowd. “When I returned home I saw that my house was surrounded by the mob. Then an Army jeep with a number of people at¬ tacked my house. As I found myself in a dangerous situation I ascended a ladder and went into the Point Four premises which are next to my house.”

That Point 4 compound was the Tehran regional team head¬ quarters. It was separated from the prime minister’s home by a wall ten feet high. Together the two compounds formed an “L.” They had no common opening. After his call Dr. Mossadegh had left the Shah’s palace by a

Yankee Go Home

125

side exit. He had been home long enough to return to bed. When firing began at his gate on Kakh Avenue he was again in the familiar pajamas and bathrobe. At 3:35

p.m.

the members of Tehran regional team saw a lad¬

der suddenly appear over the wall of the parking lot at the back of Point 4 compound. The prime minister, helped by one of his sons and Dr. Fatemi, his foreign minister, scaled the wall. Point 4 made the leads of many sensational news stories around the world, since Dr. Mossadegh, still in the same striped pajamas, chose to describe his climb in his appearance before the Majlis later that night. A political settlement was reached. It was a Mossadegh victory. The Shah remained in Iran. The Senate disappeared. General Zahedi fled into hiding. Except in a role of innocent bystander, Point 4 had nothing to do with the affair in which it thus obliquely figured. Our oper¬ ations were afterward disrupted somewhat. A company of ma¬ chine gunners moved into the regional office to help restore order in Dr. Mossadegh’s compound. It remained for a few days to protect the prime minister. The captain politely invited the re¬ gional team staff to continue to use their offices and to step over and around any sleeping soldiers. They chose instead to crowd into the headquarters building with us until an uneasy calm returned and the soldiers departed. We were learning to live in what Robert Louis Stevenson, in “Aix Triplex,” called a “tremendous neighborhood.” The word was then received by me about the impossibility of using our funds for spray planes. With much embarrassment I now had to ask Dr. Siafollah Moazzemi, who had succeeded Engineer Taleghani as minister of agriculture, to sign a new locust project agreement with me. This one eliminated the planes and increased the number of trucks and other vehicles. Dr. Moazzemi, new in office and suspecting a hidden motive behind the request, was most reluctant. He expressed grave con-

126

Mission for Peace

cern over the chance that a serious locust infestation might de¬ velop. If such a thing happened, he pointed out, the government would be roundly criticized for not being prepared. And already the government had almost more troubles than it could bear. My efforts to reassure him did not succeed very well. I showed him reports from Africa that hatches of crawler locusts had been light. I pointed out that Iran would have the help of the regional team of locust fighters. Then I reminded him that Iran still had four small planes in good working order. In the end Dr. Moazzemi signed the revised agreement, but he was not happy about it. The Iranian government almost immediately accepted a Rus¬ sian offer to send planes and technicians to fight locusts. This time the Russians were stationed at the Shiraz airport in popu¬ lous Fars Province. They were there during the days of midApril that were to prove so trying. Keyhan, a responsible newspaper with a record of fair treat¬ ment of the news, reported that “the Foreign Minister last week asked the Soviet Ambassador to give further aid for the locust campaign in the southern part of Iran. Among the many coun¬ tries which undertook to give aid in the locust fight Soviet Russia was the only one which performed its undertakings in full. . . . Political circles in Iran pay special attention to the issues concern¬ ing the United States, and the Iranian Government’s request for further aid from Russia. The Soviet Government will probably give the requested aid as well as other aids at a time when Iran is disappointed by the West.” The foreign minister who made that request was Dr. Fatemi, who in a few months would be calling for the establishment of a “republic.” He later was con¬ victed of treason and executed by a firing squad. The Point 4 help in the 1953 locust campaign was much more significant than the Russian aid. Our team in Khuzistan, with two regional planes and four Ministry of Agriculture planes, controlled a serious outbreak, the only one in Iran that year. The

Yankee Go Home

127

Russian planes were not well adapted to low-level spraying, but that deficiency made little difference, since there were few locusts to be sprayed in their area. The comic-opera aspect of the affair of February 28 soon gave way to grimmer realities. Civil unrest deepened. Demonstra¬ tions grew larger and more frequent as the prime minister pressed his contest with the Shah. He now asked more and more insistently for control over the royal estates.

Showings of

strength became more violent when it was reported that the extreme nationalists were welcoming Tudeh support in the streets. A mass demonstration was staged in Shiraz on April 16. The demonstrators’ orders were to march to the telegraph office and file a wire supporting Dr. Mossadegh’s position. Throughout April similar “shows of popular support” occurred in Tehran. We closed our Sepah Avenue office early on April 17 to get our people off the streets. Late that afternoon I received a telegram from E. C. Bryant, provincial director at Shiraz. A mob had wrecked the Point 4 office there the day before. The inflamed rioters had turned from the telegraph office and crossed the street to the Point 4 headquarters in the Municipal Building, another wing of which housed the police station. Only an Iranian watch¬ man was on duty. He was beaten and overrun. The local authori¬ ties had made no effort to halt the attack. Ambassador Henderson and I called at the prime minister’s office to protest. Dr. Mossadegh told us that martial law had already been declared in Fars Province. A new governor general and a new military commander were being sent at once to restore law and order. He besought us not to halt Point 4 work in Shiraz. He also tried to discourage me from flying south. When he saw he could not he asked that I take Engineer Abolghassem Radjy along to report for him. Mr. Radjy, deputy director of the Plan Organization, was one of my closest friends. When we left the prime minister’s office an employe met us

128

Mission for Peace

in the street with a telegram telling of another attack. Ameri¬ cans in Shiraz had been driven from their homes and were tak¬ ing refuge in the Garden of Heaven, headquarters of the Ghashghai tribe. Accompanied by a few others, Mr. Radjy and I took off as early as possible the next day. We arrived in midafternoon after a very rough trip. E. C. Bryant and Dr. A. S. Lazarus, virologist of our Health Division who was in Shiraz to set up a trachoma labora¬ tory, met us at the airport. Mr. A. Mirurand of the Shiraz branch of the Bank Melli introduced himself. He said that the prime minister had cabled to designate him our host. He had quarters for us in his rooms above the bank. He told us we had been preceded two hours before by an Iranian Army plane bring¬ ing some officials from Tehran. These, it developed, included Mr. Saba, the new governor general, and Brigadier General Mir Jehengari, the new military commander. Several of the Russian spray planes were parked on the airport apron when we arrived. They looked like training planes. “They can’t be safely flown very close to the ground,” E. C. said. “They spend a lot of time here at the airport.” “Did the fliers have anything to do with your troubles?” I asked. “No, not that anyone could see. Tudeh students from the medical school first turned the mobs. These fliers are under strict military discipline and are marched around in a group. They seldom have any freedom.” As protocol demanded, we went immediately to military head¬ quarters. Here we found that we had stumbled in while the command was passing. From there we proceeded to the office of Governor General Nakhjevan. We found Mr. Saba sitting with him. Governor Nakhjevan, apparently unaware that he was about to be replaced by his other guest, said that he was exceedingly sorry for what had happened. He insisted that he had the high¬ est regard for Mr. Bryant and the excellent work of Point 4. He

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had not wanted to permit the demonstration to take place on April 16, he said, but he had been instructed to do so. An investi¬ gation had been started, he reported. Already thirty-two arrests had been made of those who were believed to have been responsi¬ ble for the violence directed at Point 4 and the Americans. Gov¬ ernor Nakhjevan added that nearly everyone welcomed the Americans in Shiraz and approved of the Point 4 program, which he hoped would be resumed right away. E. C. Bryant asked our military guard, four soldiers in a jeep, not to follow us to the Garden of Heaven. I soon saw why, for there we met the Ghashghai warriors. There was no one in our car whom they knew. Fifty or more of them were drawn up at the gateway. They wore striking gray felt hats with rakish, out¬ size earflaps erect on either side. Most of them were armed with stout war clubs three or four feet long. Many of these had ironspiked heads weighing about two pounds. The manner in which these clubs were brandished showed that we were not to pass; until authorized. And the speed with which the guard was rein¬ forced from inside the large garden indicated that only a major force could get through if it were not wanted. A few of the war¬ riors carried guns—there was even one carelessly slung subma¬ chine gun—but the war clubs seemed a little more menacing. These were hill people. The faded clothes and weatherbeaten faces gave evidence of long marches in the sun. They were con¬ vincingly determined in mien. The fact that the Ghashghai had guests who did not wish to be disturbed pleased and impressed them. These tribesmen were keyed up and itching for a fight. I had no desire to oblige them unless I might be counted on their side. When the second car, carrying E. C. Bryant, arrived the scene changed magically. The gate was flung open and we were grinningly saluted. We passed through to a hearty welcome at the old manor house. The American families were in the great hall upstairs. We were quickly taken to them. All our people were there, surrounded by beds and baby bottles. Through the window I saw many warriors in the garden.

130

Mission for Peace

Bryant, who had had long experience with the Red Cross be¬ fore joining our staff, said, “We are even beginning to smell like a refugee camp.” In spite of their discomfort the people were in good spirits. I told them that the prime minister had expressed his deepest regret and that the governor had assured us order would be restored. I promised that Ambassador Henderson and I would find room in Tehran for anyone who wished to leave Shiraz but emphasized that we wanted the program to continue. They would stick it out. Most of the ten American families lived at the edge of town, near the Garden of Heaven. Bryant had scheduled a meeting at his house for 10:15 A-M-> April 17, the day after the offices were ransacked. Some soldiers under a Captain Yekzeban came at about 10130 in response to a request Mr. Bryant had made of the governor. The staff meeting had begun when Mansour Bahmanbegi, Mr. Bryant’s Iranian assistant and a member of the Ghashghai tribe, rushed to the door shouting, “There are about 500 of them marching up the street.” From the door the staff members could see some of the mob throwing stones at houses along their way. Captain Yekzeban and one or two of his soldiers fired a few tentative shots over the heads of the mobsters who fell back only a few yards. Some taxicabs had been scurrying ahead of the marching throng like chickens fleeing before running boys, not knowing which way to turn. Mr. Bryant and the others put the women and children into the cabs, gathered up the remainder of the Americans and followed the only road open, that leading to the Garden of Heaven. The Ghashghai opened their manor house to them. Traditionally the Ghashghai stands aloof from or actually op¬ poses the city people in Shiraz. The tribal leaders had been on the outs with some of the townspeople, but with others they had found a common meeting place in their firm support of Dr. Mossadegh. The Ghashghai’s support, though, was based more

Yankee Go Home

131

on opposition to the Shah than on alignment with Dr. Mossa¬ degh’s program. In any event the Ghashghai seized upon the Americans’ plight as a cause. Around a hundred campfires under the old trees in the vast garden, tribesmen gathered to discuss a frontal attack on the city. More and more fighting men came down from the hills. But the city mobs made no approach to the Garden of Heaven and the crisis passed. When I had heard the details of Bryant’s story I understood better the tension at the gates when we arrived at the Garden of Heaven. Already General Mir Jehengari had ordered heavy guards at all of our installations. At the Bank Melli that night the general and Colonel Falzeli, military administrator under martial law, called on Abolghassem Radjy, E. C. Bryant and me. “It would help to restore the general self-respect of the city,” General Jehengari told me, “if the Americans would return to their houses. Most Shirazi are greatly shamed by what has hap¬ pened. Also it would help to calm down the Ghashghai. We have restored order and I can assure you that there will be no more difficulty.” I turned to Bryant. “E. C., do you think that will be good enough for you?” “If the General says he has the situation under control, we’ll return to our houses right away.” I flew back to Tehran on Saturday morning. Ambassador Henderson and I arranged to see Prime Minister Mossadegh April 23. The prime minister said that British agitators had been behind the Shiraz incident. I said we had reason to believe Communists had taken charge of the mob. The prime minister said that it was all the fault of the governor and the military commander in charge in Shiraz. I told him that Mr. Bryant had seen a telegram sent by the appropriate office in Tehran instructing the governor

132

Mission for Peace

not to interfere with the demonstration scheduled for April 16. Through our long acquaintance Dr. Mossadegh and I had up to this time always maintained a very friendly, rather bantering relationship. There was no levity in his manner now. I am afraid I was very serious too. Still, official co-operation and col¬ laboration with our work continued until the very day his re¬ gime fell, a few months later. Indeed, the prime minister made some effort to make amends. On May 4,1953, for example, he started a letter to me: “Before taking up the subject of this letter I would like to express my sincere thanks for the TCI co-operation as technical aid extended in the last two years in connection with the improvement of reclamation and industrial projects.” The seasonal danger from locusts had passed and the Russian planes were withdrawn. It was, incidentally, only in the field of locust control that the Russians provided any assistance to Iran. Following the Shiraz incidents the Joint Commission for So¬ cial and Economic Development met.. At the meeting Dr. Moazzemi who had been so reluctant to sign the locust project agreement in February, said, “I want to add my personal ap¬ preciation in addition for the quick and effective help given by Point 4 in the locust campaign.” By May n E. C. Bryant could report, “We are very pleased that from a program standpoint we are at present time function¬ ing nearly 100 per cent. The repair on the headquarters build¬ ing is now all completed and there are no existing visible signs that this establishment was subjected to an attack.” Unrest was still evident in other quarters, however. At Kermanshah Homer A. Mathiesen, the regional director, reported two incidents. Four men had tried to create disturbances, first in his offices and later in his house. The police arrested two but didn’t catch the others. In the canyon above the Darband Hotel, a favorite walking

Yankee Go Home

133

place, a Point 4 technician and his family had been surrounded by a group of rowdy hikers and forced to leave. A group including some students confronted some of those participating in the graduation ceremony of a class of laboratory technicians at the Malariology Institute on the university cam¬ pus. They plastered several with “Yankee Go Home” stickers. When Dr. Marcel de Baer, resident representative of the secretary general of the United Nations, said he was no Yankee the crowd jeered, “Frenchy Go Home.” Encouraging messages kept coming from rural areas, though. I received this one from Mazandaran Province on May 15,1953: We, the undersigned, on behalf of 5,000 inhabitants of Soldeh district, wish to express our appreciation for the goodwill, ef¬ forts, and also for the material, moral and educational assistance of the Point 4 Caspian branch, which by providing experts and engineers and spending considerable amount of money have made the construction of a new six-class school building possible. By placing the new building at our disposal they have saved our children from the previous one which was very old and miser¬ able. We express our sincere thanks to all your staff, especially those of educational branch who have been forerunners in this benevolent act. We also wish to thank in particular Engineer Juyebari, who has personally been in charge of the constructional operations, performing his duties in the best possible manner, a fact which proves once more your good intentions. We hope you will duly commend such employees. But Shahbaz, an extreme leftist newspaper in Tehran, at¬ tacked Dr. Mossadegh for his letter to me: The Prime Minister, in a letter to Mr. Warne, Director of TCI, has appreciated Point 4’s so called industrial and development activities in Iran. It seems that Dr. Mossadegh has forgotten that some time ago a TCI agent was arrested at a restricted frontier area.

134

Mission for Peace

We have time and again unveiled the evil objectives of this espionage center and we will continue our campaign until they are expelled.

Dr. Mossadegh had not forgotten, as Shahbaz charged, that one of our men had been arrested in a restricted area. No such incident ever occurred. A little later the same paper said: “On Tuesday Mr. Warne visited the cotton demonstration farms in Ghamsar. The real purpose of the trip was to inspect the American military and strategic bases in the north.” This was another typical propaganda piece. Ghamsar is east of Tehran. So far as I have ever heard there is nothing at all of military importance in that vicinity. There were no American bases, strategic or otherwise, in Iran. Incidents like those in Shiraz of course raise questions. Cer¬ tainly a technical assistance program would flourish best in a stable political situation. Such a program seeks long-term ob¬ jectives, the ultimate goals improvement of human living where development has been delayed. This means the slow and careful building of institutions, making physical improvements, designing and executing plans of social progress. At every step of every activity the program can be wrecked by wanton acts. Re-building requires patience and strong faith. In an atmosphere of confusion and misdirected energies tasks that require steady hands may be jostled awry and hard-won progress tumbled in the dust. When heedless action is taken by the very people who need help and for whom the labor has been undertaken it is most disheartening. But in the completely stable political situation that would fur¬ nish an ideal setting for Point 4, it is unlikely that any technical assistance would be needed. Stability is usually based on relatively advanced social and economic development. The Point 4 program is almost necessarily conducted in a country where it is needed most and most difficult to perform. Iran was such a country. Its

Yankee Go Home

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aspirations parallel our own, but centuries of development must be telescoped into years if it is to come abreast. Everywhere in Iran’s slow march of progress there have been many temporary reverses, much trial and error. In the attempt to compress the centuries for Iran, the same erratic progression will be the rule. But the country will move forward. Even the backward step on April 16 in Shiraz was redressed to the positive side a little later. “Yankee Go Home” was a facet of the contest of the day. It was the outcry of the very forces we were fighting in the locust project, as in all the other activities by which we tried to improve the lot of the Iranians. The confusion and real pain arising from the impasse on oil were the basic fuel on which the fire fed. The antiforeign agitation of reactionary religious figures created an atmosphere in which it could burn brightly. But the Yankees didn’t even stop work, let alone go home.

Mission/10

The Fight for Life

D

r. Jahaxshah Saleh

graces his profession of healer. One

of a group of distinguished brothers, he has several times

been minister of health and was dean of the medical school at Tehran University. A dynamic leader of thought in Iran, Dr. Saleh had served on the original Joint Commission for Rural Improvement when the Point 4 program first was set up under Prime Minister Razmara in 1950. When he returned to the Cabinet in September 1953 he became a member of the Joint Commission for Social and Economic Development established the previous December. Immediately he went about the country to see what progress had been made in the improvement of rural health facilities and services. After a visit to Mazandaran Dr. Saleh told the Joint Commis¬ sion that the Public Health Cooperative (THCO) had helped the Ministry of Health to progress from the “pill pushing busi¬ ness" to field programs of substantial character in pre-natal care, well-baby clinics, health education, sanitation and preventive medicine. “I went into a school near the town of Amol," Dr. Saleh said. “I pointed at one of the little boys sitting on a bench by die door. ‘Tell me,' I asked him. ‘what causes malaria;’ “ ‘A microbe.' the litde boy replied. “ ‘How is it spread:' I asked the boy. “ ‘By the bite of the female Anopheles mosquito,’ the boy re¬ plied instantly. “ ‘How do you recognize this, your enemy ?’ I asked him.

156

The Fight for Life

137

“ ‘It is the one,’ the little fellow answered seriously, ‘that when she sits down she sticks her little behind up in the air.’ ” “It is wonderful,” Dr. Saleh repeated, “how much progress has been made. Until this health education work got under way the people in the rural areas near the Caspian didn’t even know about microbes. They said some diseases were hot diseases and some diseases were cold diseases. They had no idea how to pro¬ tect themselves and their children from infections.” Dr. Saleh went on to say that the school children had now learned about the Anopheles mosquito and the microbe from posters and little lessons given them at their school. Already they had carried the information home to their parents. The additional co-operation we received in the DDT spraying to con¬ trol malaria was good proof of that. As time went on the PHCO, staunchly supported by Dr. Saleh, did many more things that drew much favorable attention to the program. The Ministry of Health had begun a malaria control program before Point 4 arrived but at that time no other preven¬ tive medicine was attempted. Since the Ministry had no public health service, technicians from the World Health Organization laid out the plans, and spraying had begun. But the project ran into trouble. The DDT supply was soon exhausted. After the nationalization of the petroleum industry in 1951 the Iranian government was unable to supply the foreign exchange with which to buy more. One of the first things Point 4 did, while the rural improvement project was still in the planning stages, was to rescue the malaria control project. It immediately flew in DDT for emergency use and shipped a larger supply during the summer of 1951. When the PHCO was organized in the spring of 1953 the malaria control project was transferred to its juris¬ diction. The dramatic story of Iran’s conquest of malaria re¬ quires the fuller discussion included later in this chapter. The PHCO is an excellent example of co-operative manage¬ ment of a technical assistance project in a field in which the host

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Mission for Peace

government has previously had no experience. The consistent policy of operating only with and through Iranian agencies couldn’t be followed in public health, as well as in a few other areas. Iran had no agency with which we could work. The government had to create agencies when this was true. Thus the PHCO became the public health department of the Iranian Min¬ istry of Health. The Public Health Cooperative was administered by co-direc¬ tors, one appointed by the minister of health and the other by Point 4. The health division of Point 4 automatically became the American complement to the health co-operative. The Iranian staff was recruited from experts Point 4 had trained in public health, from a group of officials of the Ministry of Health and from the force employed in the malaria control project. The WHO and Point 4 experts became advisors of the PHCO co¬ directors. The funds, supplies, and equipment allocated by Point 4 to its health division were the contribution of the United States to financing the PHCO. The Ministry of Health con¬ tributed to the joint fund the salaries of its personnel and other budget items related to the work. The Plan Organization, an Iranian agency which had as a part of its legal function the stimu¬ lation of work in public health, contributed funds directly to the PHCO. The Institute of Malariology at the University of Tehran continued to conduct the field surveys to determine areas of high incidence of malaria and to map out the spraying program for the PHCO. Thus was quickly created and rapidly built an effective agency to carry on programs which were seriously needed in any rural improvement plan but which previously had not been included in the government’s activities. It was a fifty-fifty deal too, though of the kind in the story of the “fifty-fifty sandwich”—one horse to one rabbit. But in this case the United States contributed the rabbit. We recruited fourteen American technicians and advisors for the PHCO.

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These could hardly be said to equal the 2,400 Iranian techni¬ cians, from doctors down to spray-pump operators, provided by the Iranian government. When I saw how much was done through inspiration and training and a little assistance my enthusiasm for the PHCO pro¬ gram almost equaled that of Dr. Saleh on his visit to Mazandaran. The PHCO organized itself to combat epidemic outbreaks of the many diseases that afflict Iran. So many times that it became commonplace the PHCO moved its specialized teams into an area to put down a typhoid outbreak. A soldier died of typhus in a barracks near Meshed. The PHCO moved in with its clean-up team and flea killers and completely renovated the place. There was only the one death. The group’s most spectacular service to date came in December 1954, when virulent smallpox broke out near Tabriz. The disease had spread to the city before a small village was identified as its source. Each day the number of cases reported rose sharply. The number of deaths increased proportionally. In a campaign unique in Iran, the Public Health Cooperative’s division of health education marshaled all its forces to support a vaccination program in Tabriz. Using every medium from silk-screened posters to the Tabriz radio, the technicians laid the problem squarely before the people of the city. The PHCO flew vaccine to Tabriz from Tehran. They set up vaccination stations in every gendarmerie post and every schoolhouse. Technicians con¬ verged on the capital of Azerbaijan to carry out the mass vac¬ cination program. In eleven days 210,000 men, women and children in and around Tabriz were vaccinated against smallpox. This number represented more than three quarters of the population of the area affected. The number of new cases began to drop off. The epidemic was brought under control with fewer than forty deaths. For his part in this campaign Dr. Harald S. Frederiksen

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of the Point 4 staff in 1956 received a Flemming award for out¬ standing work in the United States Federal Service. The advocates of spectacular projects in preference to long¬ term technical assistance programs had proposed again and again that all our health funds be concentrated in the construc¬ tion of a single large hospital. The services of the PHCO in a single month in Tabriz did more to help Iran than those of even a very large hospital could have done over many years. In Iran, as in most underdeveloped countries, health statistics are inadequate. Reliable records of such basic information as morbidity, infant mortality and general life expectancy are non¬ existent. Dr. R. Leslie Cherry, head of the health division in 1954 and 1955, believed that fifty per cent of Iranian babies die in their first year. Of those who live one year he thought fifty per cent would die before the age of six. The infant mortality rate may be even higher. Many boys certainly become heads of families at very early ages. Not just once or a few times, but many times, I have met village youngsters of fourteen or fifteen who accepted and were recognized as carrying full responsibility as heads of their families. An eminent Iranian medical man once told me that heart disease is not a serious problem because, as he explained, “Most of our people die of other ailments before reaching an age when heart disease would be encountered.” Large areas of Iran are without trained physicians or other health practitioners. Old crones of the village become midwives without any knowledge of sanitation or training in dieir calling. They employ folk ways and folk medicines, the leaves, seeds, roots of plants that grow in the deserts or on the hills. I do not scoff at these remedies, for I know that some may have values yet unrealized. But I am reminded of an experience years ago in the Altoplano of Peru. A friend and I stopped in a village market place and looked over the wares of an old woman selling

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home remedies. She had dried leaves, seeds, roots and colored earths—a bounty. My friend had the sniffles. “What,” he asked, “would you advise for a cold ?” “Take aspirin,” she immediately replied. The people in Iran wear amulets and practice primitive sor¬ cery. They burn esfand or spread the blood of a slaughtered sheep across the road. They hang a mirror in the path to ward off the evil eye. Thus the people seek protection. But a village’s first clamor is always for a doctor or a clinic to treat the sick. The sick die unless they are treated. No matter how accustomed the people are to being deprived they would make any sacrifice to protect the child who is left. It is not so easy to demonstrate to these people that preventive programs save lives by keeping the people well. The experience in Iran testifies loudly to the wisdom and political fortitude of men like Dr. Saleh in the Ministry of Health. He and his prede¬ cessors, Dr. Farmanfarmayan and Dr. Maleki, stood by and sup¬ ported the public health work. Certainly they were often under grave pressure to put all their resources into programs for treat¬ ment of the sick. The public health work justified their resolute stand. It was strikingly effective. In a certain village there were no young children. A village leader explained to a visiting nurse from the nearest PHCO office that he had called her because all the babies born there died of the “stiff disease.” This sounded like tetanus. The investiga¬ tion the nurse ordered showed that the two village midwives, for reasons best known to themselves, were using cow dung to staunch the flow of blood after severing the umbilical cord. An Iranian health visitor trained by the PHCO put a stop to this dreadful practice at once. She showed the midwives how to sterilize a scissors over a candle flame and gave them other med¬ icamentary instructions. Soon one of the village women bore twin babies. When the health visitor returned to the village

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after a few weeks she found the babies still living. This was an event of major importance to everyone in town. The health visi¬ tor was honored at a public celebration. Point 4 public health technicians in Iran use demonstration and training as tools just as do technicians in other fields. In co¬ operation with the Near East Foundation the PHCO has for several years operated a school for sanitarian aides in a village near Mamazan. Here trained technicians and engineers instruct young men gathered from villages throughout Iran in sanitary procedures. The students learn methods of obtaining co-opera¬ tion from villagers in programs of sanitation and clean-up. They are taught the techniques of constructing such simple facilities as sanitary privies and drainage ditches. They then break up into smaller groups and move into the villages surrounding Tehran for three months’ actual practical field work in sanitation programs being conducted by technicians of the PHCO and the Near East Foundation. Thus a large body of trained assistants is being developed and village programs are being started in most regions of Iran. Because of poor sanitation and the lack of orderly methods for disposing of human wastes, hookworm, roundworm and other parasitic diseases are prevalent in Iran. Intensive surveys made in some areas near the Caspian shore showed that as many as ninety-six per cent of the populations of some villages had worms. The construction of sanitary toilet facilities is one of the principal methods of cleaning up this dangerous situation. But the villager must be educated first. He must learn the reasons for constructing such facilities and for consistently using them. The villagers co-operated so enthusiastically with the program that they installed many thousands of crude latrines of a type approved by the public health experts. The latrine consisted of a cement block with a hole in it. On either side of the hole were foot rests. The villager dug his cesspool, fitted the slab over it and built a low mud wall around it for privacy. The hole had a

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flat wooden cover. As the number of these installations increased the project began to take on some aspects of the famous Chick Sales. As the newly trained aides spread the environmental sanita¬ tion program, so the health visitors carried to the village girls and women lessons in how to protect food from contamination. They taught the villagers the importance of boiling water for their babies. The women learned quickly how to wash babies and the importance of eating vegetables. In the rural areas of Iran women traditionally are permitted few freedoms outside the home. When they encountered this tradition the health visitors had trouble recruiting village girls to their service. Mrs. Helen Bakhtiar, a lieutenant commander in the United States Public Health Service, started a school for village girls near Ali-Shah-Avaz in the Shariar area. She had to beat the bushes for recruits. Finally one day her problem was solved. A particularly timid girl of about thirteen slid through the door and took a seat in the back of the room. She was the daughter of an influential Mullah in a near-by village. Once it was clear that the Mullah’s daughter had actually entered the class other volun¬ teers came. Helen, being a wise woman, arranged to call at the Mullah’s village to thank him for sending his daughter. She had met the Mullah before and had found him somewhat less than co-opera¬ tive. But when she thanked him now the Mullah said that he had been thinking over what Mrs. Bakhtiar had said about the im¬ portance of improving the health of the villagers. He had de¬ cided, he added, that if such work were to be carried forward among the village women, it could not appropriately be done by men. So he had sent his daughter to be trained. Thus walls are broken down and light filters through. Malaria was Iran’s Number One killer. Yet in another five

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years malaria should be under complete control. The chief credit ^pes to the national malaria control campaign, though assistance and support for it have come from many sources. Its story is dramatic and heart-warming. The words of one epidemiologist tell what the program was up against at the start: On the basis of malariometric and entomological surveys, re¬ liable hospital information, and investigations made by British and American armies [during World War II] it is estimated that two-thirds of the villages in Iran are malarial. With the excep¬ tion of uninhabited desert regions, hyper- and meso-endemic areas of malaria are found throughout the country regardless of altitude. Principal vectors are the Mediterranean and Indian faunal types A. [Anopheles] Super pictures, A. Sacharovi, A. Maculipenas, and A. Stephensi. Tertian, quartan and estivoautumnal malaria occurs countrywide. In simpler language it is probably sufficient to say that several types of Anopheles mosquito range over virtually all of Iran. Their bites spread malaria over most of the country. The disease has always been present. Serious outbreaks would sometimes claim nearly all of the people in a village and would disable so many that fields could not be harvested. Along the southern shore of the Caspian Sea, where the best land lies and where, alone in all Iran, the yearly rainfall is sufficient for the crops, some areas were so dangerously malarious that the people had abandoned them. The Ministry of Health planned the campaign with the help of three WHO doctors, Dr. Gramicia, Dr. Giaquinta and Dr. Pampana. The program was launched in the spring of 1951, before the day of the PHCO. The members of the Point 4 health group at that time were Dr. Emil Palmquist and Mr. Fred Ald¬ ridge, sanitary engineer. Both had been with the United States Public Health Service for several years. The Point 4 program

The Fight for Life was at that time still in the planning stage, y, funds were available. When the crisis ov